This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology.
How did life begin?
How life begins is one of the biggest and hardest questions in science. All we know is that something happened on Earth more than 3.5 billion years ago, and it may well have occurred on many other worlds in the universe as well.
But we don’t know what does the trick. Somehow a soup of nonliving chemicals like water and methane must combine and self-organize, growing ever more complex and coordinated, until eventually it gives rise to a living cell. The environment on the primordial Earth must also have been complicated: huge numbers of different chemicals, from metals and minerals to water and gases, all being blasted around by winds and volcanic eruptions.
Now, a few researchers are harnessing artificial intelligence to zero in on the winning conditions. The hope is that machine learning tools will help researchers achieve in years what would otherwise take decades, and help us devise a universal theory of the origins of life—one that applies not just on Earth but on any other world. Read the full story.
—Michael Marshall
‘How did life begin?’ is part of our new mini-series The Biggest Questions, which explores how technology is helping probe some of the deepest, most mind-bending mysteries of our existence.
How Facebook went all in on AI
—This is an excerpt from Broken Code: Inside Facebook and the Fight to Expose its Harmful Secrets, a behind-the-scenes look at how the social network came to build its business around artificial intelligence by author Jeff Horwitz.
In 2006, the U.S. patent office received a filing for “an automatically generated display that contains information relevant to a user about another user of a social network.”
Rather than forcing people to search through disorganized” content for items of interest, the system would seek to generate a list of “relevant” information in a “preferred order.” The listed authors were “Zuckerberg et al.” and the product was the News Feed.
The platform’s recommendation systems were still in their infancy, and as an algorithm, it wasn’t much. By 2010, the company was looking beyond the crude system to recommend content based on machine learning and user behavior.
There was no question that the computer science was dazzling and the gains concrete. But the speed, breadth, and scale of Facebook’s adoption of machine learning came at the cost of comprehensibility. Read the full extract.
AI is at an inflection point, Fei-Fei Li says
Fei-Fei Li is one of the most prominent computer science researchers of our time. The co-director of Stanford’s Human-Centered AI Institute is best known for creating ImageNet, a popular image data set that was pivotal in allowing researchers to train modern AI systems.
In her newly published memoir, The Worlds I See: Curiosity, Exploration, and Discovery at the Dawn of AI, Li recounts how she went from an immigrant living in poverty to the AI heavyweight she is today. It’s a touching look into the sacrifices immigrants have to make to achieve their dreams, and an insider’s telling of how artificial-intelligence research rose to prominence.
Li recently spoke to Melissa Heikkilä, our senior AI reporter, about the future of AI and the hard problems that lie ahead for the field. Read the full story.
This story is from The Algorithm, our weekly AI newsletter. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Monday.
The must-reads
I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.
1 We’re getting closer to the first AI-discovered drug
An experimental frontrunner for incurable lung disease is approaching late-stage trials. (Bloomberg $)
+ AI is dreaming up drugs that no one has ever seen. Now we’ve got to see if they work. (MIT Technology Review)
2 Anonymized browsing data may not be so anonymous after all
A new report raises concerns over how private the data collected and sold really is. (FT $)
+ It’s shockingly easy to buy sensitive data about US military personnel. (MIT Technology Review)
3 Climate change is ravaging every part of the US
And alarmingly little progress is being made, according to a new White House report. (Vox)
+ Emissions are on the decrease, though. (Wired $)
4 Civil liberties groups are urging the US Senate to curb surveillance powers
They argue it’s jeopardizing citizens’ liberty and democracy.(Wired $)
5 AI-generated white faces are more convincing than photographs
But it still struggles to produce realistic approximations for people of color. (The Guardian)
+ An online marketplace has introduced an AI bounty program. (404 Media)
+ How digital beauty filters perpetuate colorism. (MIT Technology Review)
6 China is winning the moon race
The first country to reach it gets to establish crucial mining precedents. (WP $)+ Scientists in China are producing oxygen on Mars, too. (FT $)
7 Police are relying too heavily on face recognition algorithms
The systems are inherently biased, and prone to making egregious mistakes. (New Yorker $)
+ The movement to limit face recognition tech might finally get a win. (MIT Technology Review)
8 The US is producing domestic nuclear fuel again
For the first time in 70 years. (IEEE Spectrum)
+ Fusion is on the rise, too. (NYT $)
+ 2023 Climate Tech Companies to Watch: Commonwealth and its compact tokamak. (MIT Technology Review)
9 You can finally delete your Threads account
Free from the worry it’ll take your Instagram account with it. (The Verge)
10 Things aren’t looking good for the Las Vegas Sphere
It’s hemorrhaging money, unsurprisingly. (Motherboard)
+ There’s no escaping it as you stroll along the Vegas Strip. (New Yorker $)
Quote of the day
“A bad $10 kitchen knife, or cheap Bluetooth headset, isn’t going to ruin a household. Choosing the wrong doctor, lawyer or contractor can ruin your life.”
—Curtis Boyd, founder of a fake Google review detection firm called the Transparency Company, explains the serious implications of false testimonies to The New York Times.
The big story
The mothers of Mexico’s missing use social media to search for mass graves
Mexico has long struggled with a history of kidnapping. As of October 5, there were 105,984 people officially listed as disappeared in Mexico. More than a third have vanished in the past few years, and while many are thought to have been kidnapped or forcibly recruited by criminal organizations, most are likely dead.
But authorities are still hesitant to get involved in the search for the missing. And so the task continues to fall on families. Much of the work they do now happens over social media, where people widely distribute photographs of missing relatives, coordinate search efforts, and raise awareness of the problem. But the work is not without challenges. Read the full story.
—Chantal Flores
We can still have nice things
A place for comfort, fun and distraction in these weird times. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line or tweet ’em at me.)
+ Nothing to see here, just a cat casually riding a horse.
+ Deciding the color of the year is no joke—billions of dollars rest on it.
+ Why do we say ‘roger that?’
+ For years, internet detectives have been trying to identify a mysterious song. Can you help?
+ Spare a thought for Raichu: the downtrodden Pokémon who can’t seem to catch a break.