VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД FIND US ON: YouTube Twitter
breakingnews
Go to main page   News   Sci-Tech   Mimicking malware to fake people  
MORE ON THE STORY
12.10.2009, 18:01 1 comment

Chasing online pirates is a gold mine!

Busting people who download pirated content and claiming damages is 150 times more profitable than selling it legally on the internet. Pirate-hunting has now turned into a lucrative business.

02.06.2010, 23:07 4 comments

4G battle: military vs. mobile operators

The commercial introduction of 4G-mobile technology in Russia may be postponed indefinitely as the country’s mobile operators are competing for the necessary frequencies with the Ministry of Defense.

26.08.2010, 21:01 3 comments

New Explorer browser gets brief public showing

The Russian division of Microsoft appears to have inadvertently revealed a corporate secret.

Image from CG4TV.com 22.09.2009, 16:42 2 comments

Managing the future – and the message

The presidential plan to collect suggestions on Russia’s future has had a seemingly unexpected side effect – the overnight popularity of a non-fiction author and blogger with rather radical views.

17.04.2009, 14:18 5 comments

Four Pirate Bay staff convicted to one year in prison

A Swedish court has convicted four men of helping people to break copyright law by creating and running The Pirate Bay file sharing website. The media corporations who own the content sued them for loss of earnings.

Can you see a head here? Bots hopefully can't. 03.11.2009, 17:39 1 comment

Moving blots to defeat Internet bots

The next-gen version of captcha, a variety of tests used on Internet website to tell real living humans from spamming bots, may be using animated pictures resembling paper sprayed with ink.

07.04.2011, 17:29 1 comment

Historama, April 7

This day in Russian history marks the creation of the Russian Internet, the first party of iron ore extracted from the largest basin on Earth, and Königsberg becoming part of the USSR.

19.08.2009, 00:05 1 comment

"Identity fraud: Wi-Fi crime"

Unsecured Wi-Fi networks are to blame for Internet credit card fraud, said Berin Szoka, director of Center for Internet Freedom.

17.03.2010, 06:54

Internet identity theft on the rise in Russia

Social networking may be one of the fastest growing trends on the Internet, but it also appears to be the source of one of the biggest online dangers: identify theft.

17.04.2009, 17:00 1 comment

‘File-sharing cannot be stopped’ – Internet analyst

Piratebay.org trial will set a precedent and many file-sharing sites will be shut down, says Andrey Mikhayilyuk, editor-in-chief of Zhelezo computer magazine, but says it is impossible to stop sharing on the Internet.

Mimicking malware to fake people

Published: 28 July, 2009, 17:19

TAGS: Crime, SciTech, Internet


Future smartphone viruses designed for identity theft will be will be able to learn and impersonate the phone owner, a panel of experts on artificial intelligence believes.

Soon criminals may use new generation of mobile phone viruses. They would monitor all communication of the owner – emails, text messages, to-do lists and so on. Eventually the malware will have accumulated enough data to impersonate the victim, with or even without external guidance from its authors. It could not only get access to banking information, but also get the person involved in crime without him even knowing it.

This disturbing scenario was among many considered by a group of 25 AI scientists, robot designers, and ethical and legal experts who have gathered to discuss possible risks of expected rapid development in artificial intelligence, as New Scientist magazine reports.

The panel, which was working under the auspices of the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AAAI), identified mimicking viruses as a realistic short-term risk. Tom Mitchell of Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania said: “If we could do it, they could,” referring to cybercriminals.

"There are a few thousand lines of code running on my cell phone and I sure as hell haven't verified all of them," agreed Peter Szolovits, an AI researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, who was not on the panel.

Thankfully the scientists see more apocalyptic “rise of the machines” scenarios as far less possible. Human-like artificial intelligence is still 20 to 100 years away according to their estimates. And the probability of the internet suddenly gaining self-awareness is negligible.

+4 (4 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
28.07.2009, 13:51

Moldovan accused of murdering 1800-year-old

The involvement of archeologists has saved a Moldovan man from imprisonment for murdering a woman, who was around 1800 years old.

IBM Roadrunner, currently the world's fastest computer 28.07.2009, 17:22 4 comments

Supercomputers – a new priority for Russia

Russia's government has pledged to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on building supercomputers in Russia in a bid to revolutionize science and technology in the country.