Resident of the world, traveling the road of life
67183 stories
·
21 followers

Doctors against data abuse — BMA and RCGP protest NHS AI data handover

1 Share

A pile of patient data that was sent to NHS England from doctors to research Covid-19 just happened to get poured into the NHS’s new LLM, Foresight. The British Medical Association and the Royal College of General Practitioners have referred NHS England to the Information Commissioner’s Office: [RCGP; Politico]

The methodology appears to be new, contentious, and potentially with wide repercussions. It appears unlikely that a proposal would have been supported without additional, extraordinary agreements to permit it. The self-declared scope of this project appears inconsistent with the legal basis under which these data were to be used.

Foresight wants to use anonymised data from everyone in England to produce exciting new insights into health. It runs in-house at University College London on a copy of Facebook’s Llama 2. [UCL]

The British public is overwhelmingly supportive of good use of health data. But they also worry about their data being sent off to private companies like Palantir. [Understanding Patient Data; Pharmacy Business; Guardian, 2023]

And, of course, there’s not really such a thing as anonymised data. It’s notoriously easy to de-anonymise a data set. NHS England is mostly using “anonymised” as an excuse to get around data protection issues. [New Scientist, archive]

NHS England says it’s “paused” data collection and launched an internal audit of the project. They insist that taking care of it themselves is fine and they don’t need some outsiders — like, say, the data protection authority for the UK — sticking their noses in. The investigation proceeds.

 

Read the whole story
mkalus
44 minutes ago
reply
iPhone: 49.287476,-123.142136
Share this story
Delete

Wenn der Dienstag ein Montag ist

1 Share

Read the whole story
mkalus
45 minutes ago
reply
iPhone: 49.287476,-123.142136
Share this story
Delete

Apple Intelligence at WWDC 2025! Don’t expect much — it still doesn’t work

1 Comment

Apple Intelligence is most famous for mangling news headlines and text messages and making spam texts look legitimate. Bloomberg wrote in March: [Bloomberg, archive]

People just aren’t embracing Apple Intelligence. Internal company data for the features indicates that real world usage is extremely low.

The 2025 Worldwide Developers’ Conference starts shortly! The keynote will mention the company’s strategy for Apple Intelligence. Third-party developers get to tap into Apple’s on-device AI models! [Bloomberg, archive]

The keynote will not promise exciting new products, because there aren’t any, and last year’s still don’t work.

Apple is encountering “challenges with updating Siri” because they just can’t get generative AI to give reliable responses. This is why Robby Walker, the executive then in charge of Siri, got fired in March. [FT, archive]

Apple also really wants its AI models to run on the device — and a model running on a iPhone is just not going to be as good as its competitors’ much larger, and ridiculously expensive and heavily subsidised, models that run in the cloud.

Google has forced Gemini onto everyone’s Android phone whether they want it or not. It’s reportedly terrible at accents it wasn’t trained on, like the wild variety of accents in the UK. [Reddit]

Amazon’s Alexa+ chatbot edition still hasn’t been seen in the wild, a month after Amazon CEO Andy Jassy told investors it had over 100,000 users, honest! No you can’t talk to one.

Maybe you’ll get your chatbot Siri next year. Or the year after.

Update: Steve Farrugia live-skeets the keynote. Yeah, it’s tweaks and polish on existing features. “Anything AI was more ML.” [Bluesky]

Read the whole story
mkalus
21 hours ago
reply
Apple’s saving grace might be that they won’t release something that isn’t really working. Which is basically all of AI.

Not that it will stop them from trying. But I suspect we won’t see much more of this unless there is a massive breakthrough.
iPhone: 49.287476,-123.142136
Share this story
Delete

LAX Quantas Lounge (B&W)

1 Share

Michael Kalus posted a photo:

LAX Quantas Lounge (B&W)



Read the whole story
mkalus
21 hours ago
reply
iPhone: 49.287476,-123.142136
Share this story
Delete

LAX Quantas Lounge

1 Share

Michael Kalus posted a photo:

LAX Quantas Lounge



Read the whole story
mkalus
21 hours ago
reply
iPhone: 49.287476,-123.142136
Share this story
Delete

86

1 Share

Michael Kalus posted a photo:

86



Read the whole story
mkalus
21 hours ago
reply
iPhone: 49.287476,-123.142136
Share this story
Delete
Next Page of Stories