Archive for April 19, 2024

Microsoft Introduces VASA-1…. Which Might Not Be The Best Thing For Us Humans Just Yet

Posted in Commentary with tags on April 19, 2024 by itnerd

From the “this might not be a good idea” department comes the announcement by Microsoft of VASA-1. Here’s the TL:DR on this:

We introduce VASA, a framework for generating lifelike talking faces of virtual charactors with appealing visual affective skills (VAS), given a single static image and a speech audio clip. Our premiere model, VASA-1, is capable of not only producing lip movements that are exquisitely synchronized with the audio, but also capturing a large spectrum of facial nuances and natural head motions that contribute to the perception of authenticity and liveliness. The core innovations include a holistic facial dynamics and head movement generation model that works in a face latent space, and the development of such an expressive and disentangled face latent space using videos. Through extensive experiments including evaluation on a set of new metrics, we show that our method significantly outperforms previous methods along various dimensions comprehensively. Our method not only delivers high video quality with realistic facial and head dynamics but also supports the online generation of 512×512 videos at up to 40 FPS with negligible starting latency. It paves the way for real-time engagements with lifelike avatars that emulate human conversational behaviors.

I’ll get to why I am lukewarm at best with this. But first, let’s see what Kevin Surace, Chair, Token has to say on this:

Before Microsoft there have already been several other demonstrations of animating single face images and cloning voices. So we have been able to experience this for many months. Microsoft’s entry here is excellent and state of the art across all models I have seen. The implications for personalizing emails and other business mass communication is fabulous. Even animating older pictures as well. To some extent this is just fun and to another it has solid business applications we will all use in the coming months and years.

Of course one can replace a live webcam with a virtual version of yourself especially when you have a bad hair day. But of course the images we see today are already a digital reproduced image of you. Meaning the webcam is gathering pixels processing them compressing them sending them across the country and recomposing it on someone’s screen. This is arguably the next extension of that by manipulating the pixels in real-time so that you can truly look your best. And its still your voice and your words.

All synthetic media is democratizing what Hollywood could do with CGI for many years. All of this will lead to low cost content creation at a scale we have never seen. And that’s great for creators…even if overloading for the viewers.

Of course we continue down a road of being able to produce more convincing deep fakes at many levels. Arguably that train left the station when Photoshop was introduced. This continues to take us closer to perfect video and audio representations of ourselves with and without our permission. Of course the major models will include a watermark stating this is AI generated. But in time open source models will emerge which don’t.

We have been photoshopping ourselves for decades. Improving our looks and erasing blemishes. Is that ethical? Where does it become unethical? We all want to be and look our best. And multiply ourselves. When used properly by us, this tech does that amazingly well.

CS and entertainment are obvious. As is marketing and mass communications. Its basically a digital twin of ourselves or perhaps of our relative or a coworker (all with permission). How about birthday cards fully customized for you from a celebrity? Or when you are sick sending a video of you looking your best? Its all becoming possible and will be right in our pockets in the coming year.

Here’s my $0.02 worth. I can see scenarios where the following can happen:

  • This could allow people to fake video chats
  • This could make real people appear to say things they never actually said
  • This could allow harassment from a single social media photo

I think that Microsoft needs to demonstrate and speak to how they will gatekeep this so that it’s used with the best of intentions rather than the worst of intentions. That would take me from being lukewarm to something more positive.

Elizabeth Warren Goes Off On iMessage And Completely Gets The Facts Wrong

Posted in Commentary with tags on April 19, 2024 by itnerd

Senator Elizabeth Warren is known for being pretty outspoken. But there are times where she gets it completely wrong because she doesn’t understand the facts or she doesn’t see the big picture. This is one of those times. Below is a Tweet that Warren put out in support of the Apple anti-trust lawsuit that the DoJ has filed:

Here’s my problem with this. If you do want to use something other than iMessage, there are options out there. For example when I race with my team on the online cycling platform called Zwift, we use Discord. Not iMessage or FaceTime for that matter as some of our team communications are voice and not text. When my wife wants to keep in touch with her running friends, they use Telegram. Not iMessage. And keep in mind that the most popular messaging app out there is WhatsApp. Not iMessage. And I will also mention that her argument completely ignores the fact that RCS is coming to the iPhone later this year.

All of this makes me wonder if she’s so anti-Apple that she just doesn’t see the bigger picture that there is actually choice out there. Or that her complaints about iMessage are going to be addressed shortly. Maybe she should get the facts straight before posting something like this to Twitter. It would really help with her credibility.

Mission Cloud and CrowdStrike Announce Strategic Partnership

Posted in Commentary with tags , on April 19, 2024 by itnerd

Mission Cloud, a US-based Amazon Web Services (AWS) Premier Tier Services Partner with a focus on cloud and AI, today announced a strategic partnership with CrowdStrike (Nasdaq: CRWD) to stop cloud breaches and secure global customers building their businesses on AWS.

Cloud intrusions have grown 75% in the past year, with adversaries breaking into customer environments in as little as two minutes. The lack of cloud-native security solutions and skilled personnel to operate them puts organizations at risk. Mission Cloud One is enhancing its comprehensive managed service for AWS optimization, operations and security by standardizing on the CrowdStrike Falcon® platform for CrowdStrike Falcon® Cloud Security, the industry’s only unified agent and agentless platform for code to cloud protection. The partnership also provides customers with access to CrowdStrike Falcon Complete Cloud Detection and Response (CDR) services, delivering 24/7 protection against cloud attacks.

Learn more about Mission Cloud and CrowdStrike’s partnership here.

Fortra’s 2024 State of IBM i Security Study Is Out

Posted in Commentary with tags on April 19, 2024 by itnerd

Organizations around the world are waking up to the business impact of lax cybersecurity: unexpected downtime, lost productivity, resources tied up in lawsuits and data breach notifications. That was evident this year, when a record-setting 79% of IBM i pros surveyed ranked cybersecurity as a top concern in this year’s IBM i Marketplace Survey.

Now in its 21st year, the newly released 2024 State of IBM i Security Study, by global cybersecurity software and service provider Fortra, reveals concrete, impartial data about how IBM i systems are protected and where the gaps remain, andprovides compelling insight into the security posture of 148 IBM i server partitions – systems that are used to host business-critical applications, and that often house electronic personal health information (ePHI), financial data, and personally identifiable information (PII).

My advice would be to set aside some time to read the State of IBM i Security Study as it’s pretty eye opening. And it may give you some ideas as to where to look for gaps and fill them before threat actors look for said gaps and exploit them.

Cisco Announces Cisco Hypershield 

Posted in Commentary with tags on April 19, 2024 by itnerd

Yesterday, Cisco announced its new security architecture, Cisco Hypershield, designed to address the increasing demands of AI-scale data centers and cloud environments, ensuring that security measures can be implemented flexibly across various locations and platforms, such as data centers, factory floors, or hospital imaging rooms, whether on premises or in the cloud.

Steven Aiello, field chief information security officer at enterprise IT solutions provider AHEAD had this comment:

“We believe cybersecurity should be integrated into everything we do. Bolted-on security is more expensive and less effective. Cisco Hypershield ensures that cyber protections are included into the fabric of the enterprise. Distributed Exploit Protection will be a massive win for blue teams – legacy synthetic patching was primarily limited to edge devices, allowing lateral movement once an attacker breached the perimeter. It’s a great day for cyber-defenders!”

Cisco’s move to make cybersecurity more agile and more integrated into everything an enterprise does is brilliant. I will be watching closely to see what positive effects come from this move over the long term.