Zoe Kleinman photograph

Zoe Kleinman

Use attributes for filter !
Gender Female
BooksBirth, Boobs and Bad Advice
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1051902
Send edit request

Zoe Kleinman Life story


'Blowing the whistle on Meta means I won't work again'

'Blowing the whistle on Meta means I won't work again'
Nov 7,2023 9:31 am

...By Zoe Kleinman, Tom Gerken & Liv McMahon BBC NewsA former senior staff member at Meta says Instagram is not doing enough to protect teens from sexual harassment...

AI friends and optional jobs - Sunak and Musk share future hopes

AI friends and optional jobs - Sunak and Musk share future hopes
Nov 2,2023 6:01 pm

...By Zoe Kleinman, technology editor, & Sean SeddonBBC NewsTechnology in education, a future where work will be optional and deadly robots that can climb trees were all covered as Rishi Sunak sat down to talk AI with Elon Musk...

Rishi Sunak: AI firms cannot 'mark their own homework'

Rishi Sunak: AI firms cannot 'mark their own homework'
Nov 1,2023 2:31 pm

... Speaking to the BBC s technology editor Zoe Kleinman, he said that many AI firms had already given the UK access to their models before their release...

Warning AI industry could use as much energy as the Netherlands

Warning AI industry could use as much energy as the Netherlands
Oct 10,2023 11:21 am

...By Zoe Kleinman and Chris VallanceTechnology teamThe artificial intelligence (AI) industry could consume as much energy as a country the size of the Netherlands by 2027, a new study warns...

Government denies U-turn on encrypted messaging row

Government denies U-turn on encrypted messaging row
Sep 6,2023 12:21 pm

...By Zoe Kleinman, Tom Gerken and Chris VallanceTechnology teamThe government has denied it is changing plans to force messaging apps to access users private messages if requested by the regulator Ofcom...

Why US tech giants are threatening to quit the UK

Why US tech giants are threatening to quit the UK
Aug 12,2023 8:51 pm

...By Zoe KleinmanTechnology editorIt was difficult to maintain a poker face when the leader of a big US tech firm I was chatting to said there was a definite tipping point at which the firm would exit the UK...

Apple slams UK surveillance-bill proposals

Apple slams UK surveillance-bill proposals
Jul 20,2023 8:11 am

...By Zoe KleinmanTechnology editorApple says it will remove services such as FaceTime and iMessage from the UK rather than weaken security if new proposals are made law and acted upon...

Artificial intelligence: Experts propose guidelines for safe systems

Artificial intelligence: Experts propose guidelines for safe systems
Jul 19,2023 9:30 pm

...By Zoe KleinmanTechnology editorA global group of AI experts and data scientists has released a new voluntary framework for developing artificial intelligence products safely...

Government denies U-turn on encrypted messaging row

Jul 19,2023 5:40 am

By Zoe KleinmanContent ='JJ Lin'> , Tom Gerken and Chris VallanceTechnology team

The government has denied it is changing plans to force messaging apps to access users' private messages if requested by the regulator Ofcom.

There has been a stand-off between the UK government and tech firms over a clause in the Online SafetyContent ='JJ Lin'> Bill relating to encrypted messages.

These are messages that can only be seen by The SenderContent ='JJ Lin'> and recipient.

The BillContent ='JJ Lin'> states that if there are concerns about Child AbuseContent ='JJ Lin'> Content , tech companies might have to access it.

But platforms like WhatsApp, Signal and iMessage say they cannot access or view anybody's messages without destroying existing privacy protections for all users, and have threatened to leave the UK rather than compromise message security.

The DebateContent ='JJ Lin'> had raged for several months and for some had turned into an argument about privacy versus security. The government insists it wants both.

The Online SafetyContent ='JJ Lin'> Bill is due to be passed in autumn and is back in The HouseContent ='JJ Lin'> of Lords for its final reading on Wednesday.

A new statement concedes that the tech to access messaging without breaking security protocols does not exist. The government announced it in The HouseContent ='JJ Lin'> of Lords this afternoon, but it denied its position had changed.

Indeed, earlier versions of The BillContent ='JJ Lin'> do state that the regulator Ofcom would only ask tech firms to access messages once " feasible technology" had been developed which would specifically only target Child AbuseContent ='JJ Lin'> Content and not break EncryptionContent ='JJ Lin'> .

It has tasked tech firms with inventing these tools.

" As has always been the case, as a Last ResortContent ='JJ Lin'> , on a case-by-case basis and only when stringent privacy safeguards have been met, [The BillContent ='JJ Lin'> ] will enable Ofcom to direct companies to either use, or make best efforts to develop or source, technology to identify and remove illegal child sexual abuse Content - which we know can be developed, " said a government spokesperson.

Some security experts suggest such tech may never exist, and the tech firms themselves say it is not possible.

" Hope this brings pause to the global wave of proposals premised on similar magical thinking, " posted Amber Kak, who sits on the board of the secure messaging app Signal.

But Matthew Hodgkinson, who runs the British-based messaging platform Elements, said the latest version of The BillContent ='JJ Lin'> was " kicking The Can down the road".

" All 'until it's technically feasible' means is opening The DoorContent ='JJ Lin'> to scanning in future rather than scanning today, " He Said .

Another ViewContent ='JJ Lin'> is that this is an attempt at a last-minute diplomatic resolution in which neither the tech firms nor the government lose face: the government says it knew All AlongContent ='JJ Lin'> that the tech did not exist and removes immediate pressure from the tech firms to invent it, and the tech firms claim a victory for privacy.

Currently, the two most viable tech solutions are to either break the EncryptionContent ='JJ Lin'> - which would leave a backdoor open to any bad actors who found it - or introduce software which scans Content on a device. It is called client-side scanning and has been dubbed " The Spy in your pocket" by critics.

Children's charities like the NSPCC have described encrypted messaging as the " front line" of Child AbuseContent ='JJ Lin'> because of privacy settings.

But privacy campaigners say everybody has a right to privacy protection.

Related Topics

Source of news: bbc.com

Next Profile ❯