Tech
How Hacked Card Shufflers Allegedly Enabled a Mob-Fueled Poker Scam That Rocked the NBA
“If there’s a camera that knows the cards, there is always some kind of underlying threat. Customers are gonna be essentially at the mercy of the person setting up the machine,” poker player and card house owner Doug Polk previously told WIRED. “If you’re showing up in a private game and there’s a shuffler, I would say you should run for the hills.”
Hacking the Deckmate 2, according to prosecutors, was only one of several cheating techniques the mobsters allegedly used, albeit the one that’s described in the most detail in the indictment. The charging document also claims that they used invisibly marked cards, electronic poker chip trays, phones that could secretly read cards’ markings, and even specially designed glasses and contact lenses.
While the details of those schemes weren’t spelled out by prosecutors, they’re all well known in the casino security world, says Sal Piacente, a professional cheating consultant and the president of UniverSal Game Protection. Cards can, for instance, have hidden bar codes on their edges—printed invisibly, such as with infrared ink—that can be deciphered by a reader hidden in a chip tray or in a phone case laid on the table. In other cases, cards are similarly marked on their backs with ink that’s only visible with special glasses or contacts.
“This kind of equipment is being used more than you would think,” Piacente says. “When you go to a private game, there’s no regulation, no commission, no rules. Anything goes.”
Tech
Anthropic inks multibillion-dollar deal with Google for AI chips
Artificial intelligence company Anthropic has signed a multibillion-dollar deal with Google to acquire more of the computing power needed for the startup’s chatbot, Claude.
Anthropic said Thursday the deal will give it access to up to 1 million of Google’s AI computer chips and is “worth tens of billions of dollars and is expected to bring well over a gigawatt of capacity online in 2026.”
A gigawatt, when used in reference to a power plant, is enough to power roughly 350,000 homes, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.
Google calls its specialized AI chips Tensor Processing Units, or TPUs. Anthropic’s AI systems also run on chips from Nvidia and the cloud computing division of Amazon, Anthropic’s first big investor and its primary cloud provider.
The privately held Anthropic, founded by ex-OpenAI leaders in 2021, last month put its value at $183 billion after raising another $13 billion in investments. Its AI assistant Claude competes with OpenAI’s ChatGPT and others in appealing to business customers using it to assist with coding and other tasks.
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Anthropic inks multibillion-dollar deal with Google for AI chips (2025, October 24)
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Tech
How to ensure youth, parents, educators and tech companies are on the same page on AI
Artificial intelligence is now part of everyday life. It’s in our phones, schools and homes. For young people, AI shapes how they learn, connect and express themselves. But it also raises real concerns about privacy, fairness and control.
AI systems often promise personalization and convenience. But behind the scenes, they collect vast amounts of personal data, make predictions and influence behavior, without clear rules or consent.
This is especially troubling for youth, who are often left out of conversations about how AI systems are built and governed.
Concerns about privacy
My research team conducted national research and heard from youth aged 16 to 19 who use AI daily—on social media, in classrooms and in online games.
They told us they want the benefits of AI, but not at the cost of their privacy. While they value tailored content and smart recommendations, they feel uneasy about what happens to their data.
Many expressed concern about who owns their information, how it is used and whether they can ever take it back. They are frustrated by long privacy policies, hidden settings and the sense that you need to be a tech expert just to protect yourself.
As one participant said, “I am mainly concerned about what data is being taken and how it is used. We often aren’t informed clearly.”
Uncomfortable sharing their data
Young people were the most uncomfortable group when it came to sharing personal data with AI. Even when they got something in return, like convenience or customization, they didn’t trust what would happen next. Many worried about being watched, tracked or categorized in ways they can’t see.
This goes beyond technical risks. It’s about how it feels to be constantly analyzed and predicted by systems you can’t question or understand.
AI doesn’t just collect data, it draws conclusions, shapes online experiences, and influences choices. That can feel like manipulation.
Parents and teachers are concerned
Adults (educators and parents) in our study shared similar concerns. They want better safeguards and stronger rules.
But many admitted they struggle to keep up with how fast AI is moving. They often don’t feel confident helping youth make smart choices about data and privacy.
Some saw this as a gap in digital education. Others pointed to the need for plain-language explanations and more transparency from the tech companies that build and deploy AI systems.
Professionals focus on tools, not people
The study found AI professionals approach these challenges differently. They think about privacy in technical terms such as encryption, data minimization and compliance.
While these are important, they don’t always align with what youth and educators care about: trust, control and the right to understand what’s going on.
Companies often see privacy as a trade-off for innovation. They value efficiency and performance and tend to trust technical solutions over user input. That can leave out key concerns from the people most affected, especially young users.
Power and control lie elsewhere
AI professionals, parents and educators influence how AI is used. But the biggest decisions happen elsewhere. Powerful tech companies design most digital platforms and decide what data is collected, how systems work and what choices users see.
Even when professionals push for safer practices, they work within systems they did not build. Weak privacy laws and limited enforcement mean that control over data and design stays with a few companies.
This makes transparency and holding platforms accountable even more difficult.
What’s missing? A shared understanding
Right now, youth, parents, educators and tech companies are not on the same page. Young people want control, parents want protection and professionals want scalability.
These goals often clash, and without a shared vision, privacy rules are inconsistent, hard to enforce or simply ignored.
Our research shows that ethical AI governance can’t be solved by one group alone. We need to bring youth, families, educators and experts together to shape the future of AI.
The PEA-AI model
To guide this process, we developed a framework called PEA-AI: Privacy–Ethics Alignment in Artificial Intelligence. It helps identify where values collide and how to move forward. The model highlights four key tensions:
- Control versus trust: Youth want autonomy. Developers want reliability. We need systems that support both.
- Transparency versus perception: What counts as “clear” to experts often feels confusing to users.
- Parental oversight versus youth voice: Policies must balance protection with respect for youth agency.
- Education versus awareness gaps: We can’t expect youth to make informed choices without better tools and support.
What can be done?
Our research points to six practical steps:
- Simplify consent. Use short, visual, plain-language forms. Let youth update settings regularly.
- Design for privacy. Minimize data collection. Make dashboards that show users what’s being stored.
- Explain the systems. Provide clear, non-technical explanations of how AI works, especially when used in schools.
- Hold systems accountable. Run audits, allow feedback and create ways for users to report harm.
- Teach privacy. Bring AI literacy into classrooms. Train teachers and involve parents.
- Share power. Include youth in tech policy decisions. Build systems with them, not just for them.
AI can be a powerful tool for learning and connection, but it must be built with care. Right now, our research suggests young people don’t feel in control of how AI sees them, uses their data or shapes their world.
Ethical AI starts with listening. If we want digital systems to be fair, safe and trusted, we must give youth a seat at the table and treat their voices as essential, not optional.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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How to ensure youth, parents, educators and tech companies are on the same page on AI (2025, October 23)
retrieved 24 October 2025
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Tech
Pro-cycling crashes can be bad, but evidence suggests slower bikes aren’t the answer
It might seem counterintuitive in a sport built around speed, but the world governing body for competitive cycling wants to slow elite riders down.
Worried about high-speed crashes during pro-racing events, the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) has proposed a cap on the gear size riders can use. The idea is to lower the possible top speed bikes can achieve.
The risks are real, too. At the recent Tour Down Under Men’s Classic in Australia, a high-speed multi-rider crash on the final corner sent bikes into the barriers and into the crowd, badly injuring a spectator.
In August this year, champion British rider Chris Froome crashed while training in France, suffering a collapsed lung, broken ribs and a spinal fracture.
But would restricting gear size prevent these kinds of high-speed crashes? Certainly, not everyone thinks so.
Earlier this month, a Belgian court paused the rule change after teams and a major cycle component maker argued the safety case was not proven. While slower bikes might sound safer, they argue, the evidence tells a different story.
What the evidence tells us
The proposed rule would limit the largest gear size to 54 teeth on the front chainring and 11 on the rear sprocket. The idea is simple: lower the top gear to reduce top speed and, in theory, cut risk.
But while speed clearly matters when it comes to crashes, it is only one part of how they happen in a tightly packed peloton (the main pack of riders in a road race).
Our recent review of 18 studies of race speed and crash risk found two clear patterns:
- higher speed makes injuries worse once a crash occurs
- but the link between speed and the chance of crashing is weaker and depends on context.
Injury rates in the UCI WorldTour have climbed even though average race speeds have been steady. So, something else is at work.
We also examined the proposed gear cap itself. Based on our analysis, we argue any rule change should be evidence-based rather than simply a reaction to pressure after high-profile incidents.
Understanding why crashes occur is central to this. Essentially, they are about people and space, and happen for a number of reasons:
- when riders fight for position as they enter a narrowing corner
- when sprint “trains” (riders in the same team lining up for aerodynamic efficiency) cross wheels
- or when road “furniture” appears too late to be avoided.
In this year’s Paris–Nice race, for example, Mattias Skjelmose struck a traffic island at speed and abandoned the race. Reports described it as a poorly marked obstacle.
Course design, peloton density and inconsistent rule enforcement often play a bigger role than a few extra kilometers per hour.
Why a gear limit won’t help much
On hill descents, where many serious injuries occur, riders freewheel in a tucked body position. Gravity and aerodynamics set the speed—gearing does not.
When riders are actually pedaling in a sprint, a 54×11 gear at high “cadence” (around 110–120 revolutions per minute) gives a speed of roughly 65 kilometers per hour (km/h). The very fastest finishes in elite men’s races reach about 75 km/h—the absolute peak speed.
A cap on gearing would trim roughly 5–10 km/h from the top-end, bringing the fastest sprints down to around 65–70 km/h. But most sprint pileups start below those speeds and are triggered by contact or line changes.
Lowering everyone’s top speed could even bunch the field more tightly and raise the risk of contact. The pro-cycling world already knows what helps:
These steps match what other high-speed sports have done to reduce injuries. Motor sports redesign the environment rather than just limit speed, with NASCAR and IndyCar having adopted energy-absorbing barriers to cut wall-impact forces.
And alpine skiing manages risk with course design, as well as nets and airbag protection to control speed and crash severity.
Similar approaches to safety are used in aviation, mining and health care. The aim is to focus on the environment and behavior, measure exposure, fix the hotspots and share what works to keep improving safety.
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
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Pro-cycling crashes can be bad, but evidence suggests slower bikes aren’t the answer (2025, October 23)
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