Monday, 4 May 2026

AI’s Built‑In Safety Systems Are Hindering Criminals — and Quietly Helping Law Enforcement

Intro: the article below was written by AI under my precise instructions. Videos on YouTube paint a different picture to the one stated in the post. The situation is confused. Interestingly, a huge number of YouTube videos are only getting 1-20 views! Next to nothing. I wonder if YouTube is drowning in videos that are simply not interesting to the public. And/or AI created videos are swamping the website. I think AI will do a lot of harm to YouTube. Fake videos which are excellent in their production are what I am referring to.

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Recent research suggesting that cybercriminals are struggling to adopt artificial intelligence highlights a broader and increasingly important reality: mainstream AI systems are structurally designed to resist misuse, and this design unintentionally strengthens the position of law enforcement. While AI is not built as a policing tool, its safety architecture makes it far more difficult for criminals to exploit — and that has significant implications for crime prevention and public safety.

At the core of modern AI development is a simple principle: do not enable harm. Major AI providers embed extensive safeguards that prevent models from offering procedural guidance on illegal activities, bypassing security systems, exploiting vulnerabilities, or evading detection. These systems are trained to decline requests that could facilitate wrongdoing, even when the user’s intent is ambiguous. As a result, criminals cannot rely on AI for the kind of detailed, step‑by‑step instructions that would meaningfully enhance their operations.

This refusal behaviour is not accidental. It is the product of deliberate design choices, including filtered training data, reinforcement learning with human feedback, and rule‑based safety layers. These mechanisms ensure that when a user attempts to solicit harmful information, the AI either declines outright or redirects the conversation toward lawful, high‑level explanations. For criminals, this means AI cannot be used as a shortcut to expertise. For law enforcement, it means a powerful potential tool is effectively off the table for those who would misuse it.

Another challenge criminals face is the lack of precision and repeatability. Even when they attempt to disguise their intentions, AI systems avoid providing actionable detail in sensitive areas. Criminal activity often depends on reliable, consistent instructions. AI, by design, introduces uncertainty and vagueness in high‑risk contexts, making it unsuitable for planning or executing illegal operations. This unreliability further reduces AI’s value to criminals.

Moreover, mainstream AI platforms maintain logs, audit trails, and usage monitoring — not for policing, but for safety, quality control, and abuse prevention. Criminals are acutely aware that their interactions may be traceable. This pushes them away from regulated AI systems and toward unregulated, offline, or custom‑built models. Ironically, this migration itself can be informative: when criminals abandon mainstream tools, it reveals the types of capabilities they are seeking and the limitations they face.

The cumulative effect is that AI raises the barrier to entry for criminal activity. Opportunistic offenders who might once have benefited from easy access to technical knowledge now find themselves blocked. More sophisticated criminals must invest in specialised tools, custom models, or human expertise — all of which increase cost, risk, and visibility. In this way, AI functions much like improved locks, stronger authentication, or better surveillance systems: it doesn’t eliminate crime, but it makes it harder, slower, and more detectable.

While AI is not a law‑enforcement instrument, its safety‑first design means it naturally aligns with the goals of crime prevention. By refusing to assist with harmful activity and by limiting the operational value criminals can extract, AI becomes an indirect but meaningful ally in the effort to reduce and contain crime.

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P.S. please forgive the occasional typo. These articles are written at breakneck speed using Dragon Dictate. I have to prepare them in around 20 mins. Also, sources for news articles are carefully selected but the news is often not independently verified. And, I rely on scientific studies but they are not 100% reliable. Finally, (!) I often express an OPINION on the news. Please share yours in a comment.

Sunday, 3 May 2026

Refined, thoughtful King Charles versus clumsy thoughtless 'King' Trump!

At the end of the recent visit by King Charles III to the White House, President Trump told reporters that the USA needed more people like Charles as US citizens. Trump loves Charles's accent and his intelligent refinement. Charles was Oxbridge educated (Trinity College, Cambridge 1967-70 - see below) . He is not super-intelligent. Not at all. But he is industrious, very thoughtful and sensible. And sensitive to others. He has integrity (which occasionally lags as is the case for all humans).


Charles likes to gently take the piss out of Trump. He does it in a way which is entirely acceptable to Trump because it is refined. You can't criticise Trump or insult him. But Charles ribs Trump is a sophisticated way making it acceptable.

Sunday, 26 April 2026

Food at the White House correspondents' dinner thrown in the waste bin

All the food - presumed excellent - was thrown in the waste bin after a shooter interrupted the White House correspondents' dinner. The food could not be redistributed I am told. More Trump waste. More Trump chaos. This would not have happened if Trump was not president. He attracts chaos. We don't know the motivation behind the shooting but to me it seems to be Trump motivated by which I mean an attempt to get at Trump. What other reason is plausible?

More Trump waste? Yes, because Trump has wasted £35 billion dollars of American taxpayers' money - about $100 per American citizen - to fight an unnecessary war against Iran that is failing spectacularly.

Trump engenders chaos. He is an arch disruptor. Many Americans wanted politics to be disrupted but I am sure they did not want what Trump has brought to the White House. You'd be mad to want that.


Why couldn't the food be distributed to dog rescue shelters to feed the dogs?
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P.S. please forgive the occasional typo. These articles are written at breakneck speed using Dragon Dictate. I have to prepare them in around 20 mins. Also, sources for news articles are carefully selected but the news is often not independently verified. And, I rely on scientific studies but they are not 100% reliable. Finally, (!) I often express an OPINION on the news. Please share yours in a comment.

Saturday, 25 April 2026

The Massive Admin Headache Behind the Tariff Refunds

When the courts ruled that a major set of U.S. tariffs had been imposed without proper legal authority, it didn’t just end a policy — it created a huge administrative mess. The decision means companies that paid those duties can now claim refunds, and the total bill could run into the tens or even hundreds of billions. But getting that money back isn’t simple.

Every tariff payment is tied to a specific shipment, date, importer, and customs entry. That means millions of individual records have to be checked, verified, and matched to the right business. Customs and Border Protection has opened a new portal to handle claims, but trade experts say the workload is enormous. Processing refunds for years’ worth of imports will take time, staff, and painstaking paperwork.

Industry groups and legal analysts have described the situation as a “massive administrative unwind” — far more complicated than imposing the tariffs in the first place. When a policy is later ruled unlawful, the clean‑up is always harder: systems have to be reversed, records re‑examined, and money redistributed entry by entry.

For businesses, the refunds are welcome. For the government agencies handling them, it’s a long, resource‑heavy job created by a policy that didn’t stand up in court. The result is a national exercise in re‑processing, re‑checking, and refunding on a scale rarely seen in U.S. trade administration.

This huge administrative headache has been caused by Trump's bad decision making. He is a serial bad decision maker. This refund will bog down administrators for years when they could be doing something more productive to improve the lives of American citizens. Trump is a ghastly failure at the moment and I don't see him improving.

The failure of the Iran war he started - allegedly illegally - is an even worse example of waste. It is costing Americans $35 billion at this time (25th April 2026) just in munitions. Then add in the cost of living crisis caused or exacerbated by this war and you can how bad Trump is.

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P.S. please forgive the occasional typo. These articles are written at breakneck speed using Dragon Dictate. I have to prepare them in around 20 mins. Also, sources for news articles are carefully selected but the news is often not independently verified. And, I rely on scientific studies but they are not 100% reliable. Finally, (!) I often express an OPINION on the news. Please share yours in a comment.

Friday, 24 April 2026

Russia’s Past and Present Are Colliding - Revolution in the Air?

Russia is entering a moment of rare political unease. Two developments, seemingly separate, now illuminate the same underlying truth: the country’s leadership is looking backwards while the pressures on society are pushing forwards. The result is a widening gap between the Kremlin’s self‑image and the lived reality of its citizens.

For years, observers have noted that President Vladimir Putin’s governing style draws heavily on the political psychology of the Soviet strongman era. Analysts describe a worldview shaped by suspicion, centralisation of authority, and a belief in the necessity of a powerful state standing firm against internal and external threats. This is not a literal revival of Stalinism, but it does echo the logic of an earlier age: the conviction that stability comes from control, that dissent signals weakness, and that history’s verdict can be rewritten through force of will.

This restorationist instinct has long been visible in the Kremlin’s rhetoric. The collapse of the Soviet Union is repeatedly framed as a geopolitical tragedy, and Russia’s modern trajectory is cast as a mission to reclaim lost stature. Yet this vision sits uneasily with the country that actually exists today—a society younger, more urban, more digitally connected, and less shaped by Soviet memory than the leadership that governs it.

That tension was thrown into sharp relief this week when Gennady Zyuganov, leader of the Communist Party, issued a stark warning in the State Duma. “Revolution is in the air once more,” he declared, arguing that the economy has deteriorated so sharply that the conditions resemble those that preceded 1917. Zyuganov is no radical outsider; his party functions as a loyal opposition, and he has spent decades operating within the system. For him to invoke the spectre of revolution is therefore not a prediction but a signal—an admission that the economic strain is becoming politically dangerous.

The pressures are real. Inflation is eroding household budgets, the ruble has weakened significantly, and military spending now dominates the federal budget. Independent economists estimate that the cost of basic goods is rising far faster than official figures suggest. For many Russians, the promise of stability—the cornerstone of Putin’s legitimacy—feels increasingly fragile.

Zyuganov’s intervention also reflects a deeper structural problem. A leadership oriented toward the past is confronting a population whose concerns are rooted firmly in the present. Younger Russians, in particular, show little appetite for imperial nostalgia or the revival of old geopolitical myths. Their priorities are economic security, opportunity, and a future not defined by historical grievance.

None of this means Russia stands on the brink of upheaval. The state’s security apparatus remains powerful, dissent is tightly controlled, and public protest carries severe consequences. But the warning from within the system should not be dismissed. When economic pressure intensifies and political imagination narrows, societies become brittle.

Russia’s challenge is not simply economic or political. It is generational. A country cannot move forward if its leadership is anchored in a past that fewer and fewer citizens recognise as their own.

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P.S. please forgive the occasional typo. These articles are written at breakneck speed using Dragon Dictate. I have to prepare them in around 20 mins. Also, sources for news articles are carefully selected but the news is often not independently verified. And, I rely on scientific studies but they are not 100% reliable. Finally, (!) I often express an OPINION on the news. Please share yours in a comment.

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