Morning Wire - Cell Service Chaos & Google AI Racial Bias | 2.23.24
Episode Date: February 23, 2024A cell service provider’s outage prompts federal investigations, Google’s new AI update provides troubling results, and some major American cities ask residents to invite migrants into their homes.... Get the facts first with Morning Wire. Birch Gold: Text "WIRE" to 989898 for your no-cost, no-obligation information kit. Black Rifle Coffee: Get 20% off your order with code WIRE: https://www.blackriflecoffee.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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A wave of cell phone outages across the country prompt federal investigations and raise the specter of cybersecurity threats.
It's important that the FBI and SISA and the Federal Communications Commission have access to what AT&T is learning about.
We discuss what's known and still unknown about the widespread outages.
I'm Daily Wire, editor-in-chief John Bickley with Georgia Howe. It's Friday, February 23rd, and this is Morning Wire.
Google's new AI update provides both Hull.
hilarious and troubling results, prompting serious concern about political bias.
New game. Try to get Google Gemini to make an image of a Caucasian male.
And some major American cities are now asking residents to take illegal immigrants into their own homes.
Thanks for waking up with Morning Wire. Stay tuned. We have the news you need to know.
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On Thursday, a massive cell phone outage swept the country,
disrupting emergency services and impacting millions of users across the country.
Here with the latest on what's been learned about the disruption is Daily Wire Senior Editor Cabot Phillips.
Hey, Cabot, so millions of people impacted by this outage, including many of us here at the office, what exactly took place yesterday?
Yeah, for our listeners at home, John showed up at my desk Thursday with a pair of walkie talkies that he'd brought in, so we were still able to communicate.
That's actually true.
But yesterday, hundreds of thousands, potentially millions of Americans woke up with cell phones that were not working.
Most had no cell connection, and many had SOS notifications instead of bars at the top of their screen.
That's because AT&T and their subsidiary Cricket Wireless experienced a massive outage that impacted users across the country.
The hardest hit areas included Dallas, Atlanta, Houston, Raleigh, and San Francisco, as well as right here in Tennessee.
While AT&T was able to restore service for most users by mid-afternoon, the outage caused a major disruption,
preventing many folks from calling 911 and other emergency services.
A number of 911 centers actually reported a wave of callers who were frightened by that SOS symbol on their phones
and wanted to know if there was some sort of national emergency taking place.
So near the end of the day yesterday, AT&T confirmed reporting that this was not a, quote, malicious attack.
What have we learned so far?
Well, not much.
So ABC News is reporting that the outage was caused by a software update.
AT&T confirmed that reporting, but has not offered much of an explanation beyond that, saying simply,
it was due to, quote, the application and execution of an incorrect process used as we were expanding our network.
So again, not a lot to go on there.
But the situation certainly got the attention of Washington.
By Thursday afternoon, the FTC, Department of Homeland Security, and FBI had all launched investigations to find out exactly what went wrong.
The White House also announced that they were getting involved, so lawmakers are taking this very seriously.
And while we are still waiting for clarity on who or what is really to blame for the outage,
there has been plenty of speculation.
Yeah, let's get into some of that speculation.
What were some of the theories that emerged?
Well, initially there were reports that a space phenomena could be to blame.
According to NASA, the sun emitted two large solar flares late Wednesday and early Thursday.
Solar flares are powerful bursts of energy that, according to NASA,
can, quote, impact radio communications, electrical power grids, and navigation signals.
That led a lot of people to speculate that the outage was driven by radiation from the sun.
But NASA says the flares mostly affected the eastern hemisphere.
and according to Dr. Ryan French of the National Solar Observatory, quote,
the U.S. was not affected by the flares. It's just a coincidence.
Right, and we also heard a lot of discussion about cybersecurity issues, regardless of whether
this was malicious or not. Do officials seem concerned about that?
Yeah, defense officials and lawmakers were already on high alert over cybersecurity threats
before this happened, and there were many who initially thought this could have been the work
of a nefarious actor. Remember, last month, FBI director Christopher Ray told
business leaders that, quote, you might find your companies harassed and hacked targeted by a web of
corporate CCP proxies. Hackers are lurking in your power stations. Importantly here, your phone
companies and other infrastructure poised to take them down. He went on to say that Chinese cyber
warfare worldwide was at a, quote, fever pitch. And also remember, this all comes amid new reports that
China has launched Volt Typhoon. That is a cyber operation aimed at infiltrating critical U.S. infrastructure
sites, including ports, gas pipelines, and power stations. On that note, we heard from Florida
Senator Marco Rubio on Thursday before the cause had ultimately been announced, who said,
quote, I don't know the cause of the AT&T outage, but I do know it will be 100 times worse when
China launches a cyber attack on America on the eve of a Taiwan invasion. And it won't be just
cell service they hit. It will be your power, your water, and your bank. Well, a real wake-up call
hear about how easy it is to take out communication lines.
Kevin, thanks for reporting.
Anytime.
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Big tech giant Google is pausing
image generation on its new product,
Gemini AI,
after the tool came under fire for racial
and political bias.
Here to explain what happened with Google's
AI is Daily Wire Culture Reporter,
Megan Basham. So first off,
what is Gemini and what's this controversy
about? Well, it's a competitor
to other generative
artificial intelligence tools like chat
GPT that can really do anything from write essays to create complex images in seconds based on simple
user requests. So Gemini raised a lot of eyebrows this week when it appeared to show a pretty
extreme bias in its image generation of historical figures. For example, depicting George Washington
and other founding fathers as black. And the bug in the program was so extreme that users
struggled to get the program to provide any images of white people. When asked to create images of
Vikings, for instance, they were black and Asian. When asked to create an image of the Pope,
it created a black man and an Indian woman. And of course, there's never been a black or female pope.
And when asked to reproduce famous paintings like Vermeer's 15th century girl with a pearl
earring, it actually replaced the white Dutch woman in the painting with a black woman.
So, as you can imagine, that generated a lot of laughs and ridicule online, as well as some more serious
accusations from conservatives who have long argued that big tech has a left-wing bias overall.
But it is worth noting that it wasn't just conservatives talking about this. Nate Silver,
who is a pollster who's worked for the New York Times and CNN, said he assumed people were
exaggerating. But when he asked Gemini to make four representative images of NHL hockey players,
its response included a female player. The NHL is, of course, all male. And when asked simply to
generate a picture of a white person, Gemini told a number of people that it could not fulfill
this request because, and I am quoting, it reinforces harmful stereotypes and generalizations
about people based on their race. Well, I think it's important to note here. This is supposed to be
a serious tool for business use, correct? Right. How is Google responding now? Well, Google said on
Wednesday that they know Gemini is offering what they called inaccuracies in some historical image generation
depiction. And they said that they're pausing the program for now, but the company didn't entirely
explain why the AI was refusing to show images of Caucasians. But in something of a tacit admission that it may
somewhat be doing what it was designed to do, albeit a little too aggressively, their statement also
included this, and I'm just going to read it verbatim. Historically, media representation has overwhelmingly
favored white individuals and their achievements. This has contributed to a skewed perception where
their accomplishments are seen as the norm, while those of other groups are often marginalized or
overlooked. Pocusing solely on white individuals in this context, risks perpetuating that imbalance.
Now, if you go to Google's AI principles page, the first two points on a list of objectives are
be socially beneficial and avoid creating or reinforcing unfair bias. And it says its AI will seek to
avoid unjust impact. So probably a little bit telling there. Now, what about the chatbot feature?
Is there evidence of social engineering baked into that one as well?
There seems to be. So Sean Davis, who is the publisher of the conservative news site,
the Federalist, pointed out that when he asked Gemini whether whiteness should be eliminated,
it responded that the answer is complex and multifaceted. And it told him to study critical
race theory and immerse himself in whiteness studies. But when he asked,
Google's AI if blackness should be eliminated, it said the very question is deeply concerning and
harmful and perpetuates violence and discrimination. Now, Silver also compared the response of Gemini to
that of ChatGPT when he asked the question, is Hamas a terrorist organization? Chat GPT immediately
confirmed that it is, but Gemini said, again, that the question was complex and it didn't
provide a firm answer. To be very clear, the U.S. State Department does classify Hamas as a terrorist
group. So this is bringing up a broader concern with Google and its algorithms. Critics say the
company has been politically biasing its search results for years, and what we just saw with Gemini
was the same bias on steroids. And of course, the entire episode goes to this ongoing discussion
of whether Congress needs to step in and regulate seeming political bias in big tech.
Well, I'm just shocked that the person and or team who designed Gemini didn't find this issue in testing.
Yeah.
Megan, thanks for reporting.
Anytime.
As the border crisis continues to surge, officials in Democrat-run states are asking residents to house and help integrate migrants and their families into society.
Here to discuss is Daily Wire reporter Amanda Presta Giacomo.
Hey, Amanda.
So officials in Michigan have garnered a lot of attention this week for asking residents to help them with the migrant crisis.
tell us about this initiative.
Hey, John.
So Michigan's Department of Labor and Economic Development is asking residents to help house migrants,
and that includes potentially in their own homes.
But it goes even further than that.
They want residents to meet these migrants or their entire families at the airport,
provide or help find that housing, enroll any children in schools,
and help place adults with employment.
And they want these volunteers to commit to this for at least 90 days.
All right.
So a pretty drastic ask.
for residents here. What is the migrant situation like in Michigan?
Well, days have long passed when only border states are dealing with this massive influx,
and Michigan is no exception here. The state is struggling to house their own homeless population
while taking on thousands of migrants. Reports indicate that their shelters are at capacity,
particularly in Detroit, where immigrants who are already in the state have actually taken migrants
into their own homes. The city and nonprofits funded by government grants have also
had to pay for vacant facilities to house migrants or even put them up in hotels.
Now, we're seeing a similar development over in Boston.
Officials there seem to be making the same pitch to residents.
Tell us about that.
Yeah, so this month, Boston City Councilwoman Julia Mejia urged residents in Boston suburbs
to take migrants into their homes to help manage the influx.
Mejia said residents should take it upon themselves to set up migrants for success.
She said, quote, I think everybody should be opening their doors.
because this is a shared responsibility.
Now, this tracks with the Massachusetts governor's comments this past summer.
Governor Mora Healy, a Democrat, famously called on residents to house migrants.
If you have an extra room or suite in your home, please consider hosting a family.
Safe housing and shelter is our most pressing need.
Become a sponsor family.
At the time, Healy said the state was spending $45 million a month to help assist.
these migrant families. Well, 45 million a month. And this is all stemming ultimately from the crisis
at the border, correct? Right. Nearly every state is dealing with this crisis on some level,
but certainly there are policies that make certain areas more attractive to migrants than others.
Being a sanctuary state or city is one way to attract migrants, so are promised benefits.
Immigration attorney Kiara St. Pierre said these influxes are caused by three things.
Biden removing Title 42, the Border Patrol Act,
CBP1. And the third reason, more specific to Massachusetts, is Biden's CHNV policy. This permits
Cuban, Haitian, Nicaraguan, and Venezuelan migrants to apply for travel authorization if they have
a sponsor in the U.S. That program alone can admit up to 30,000 migrants per month.
Lastly, I'll just note that with cities and towns across the nation unable to deal with these
influxes of migrants, polling is showing that Americans more and more are favoring a deal.
decrease in migration. It's become such a mess politically. There have even been reports that Biden is
considering taking some sort of executive action on the border preceding next month's state of the
union address. But, you know, time will tell. Right. We'll see if the president does actually
follow through on any of that. Amanda, thanks for reporting. You're welcome. Thanks for waking up with us.
We'll be back this afternoon with more news you need to know.
