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Faster broadband allows Halkirk school to keep on dancing

Faster broadband allows Halkirk school to keep on dancing

BBC News10-04-2025

A dance school says a reliable broadband connection for the small village where it is based means routines are no longer disrupted by music stopping unexpectedly.Halkirk's speeds are now 3,000 times faster on average following a fibre optic upgrade, which dance teacher Tanya Horne said meant fewer interruptions when streaming tunes.The community of 950 people has gone from a speed of 2.8 megabits per second (Mbps) - one of the slowest in the UK - to up to 8,000 Mbps, according to the company that installed it.Ms Horne said: "We'd got used to having bad broadband - the music would just cut out. We don't need to worry about that now."
Communications watchdog Ofcom defines "decent broadband" as a connection providing at least 10 Mbps download speed and 1 Mbps upload speed from a fixed-line connection.It said the average download speed for rural areas of the UK was 56 Mbps.
Halkirk, near Thurso, had its service upgrade by Highland Broadband.The company is rolling out faster broadband across parts of Scotland with support from the Scottish government and Building Digital UK, a project that involves the UK and Scottish governments.Ms Horne said a more reliable connection "opened up the world" to her and her 100 students.The community is more than two hours' drive from the nearest city, Inverness.
The dance teacher said: "The dancers could benefit from online practice programmes provided by a world champion Highland dancer 250 miles away and CrossFit with a trainer in the United States, to name just a couple. "They'll now be able to do that as a group, which will be so much more valuable as a learning experience. "Likewise, I have lectured and given demonstrations for fellow professionals in North America and with good broadband we can continue that sharing of expertise in Highland dancing around the world."Ms Horne said last year a local fiddler and accordionist providing live music at a special workshop.She added: "One of our younger girls came up to me afterwards and said how nice it was to dance to continuous music - without the buffering."
The Ulbster Arms Hotel said it had also benefited from the improved speeds.General manager Jess Dreaves said: "We have 13 rooms within our hotel as well as five lodges, so having the best broadband connection that can deliver for dozens of users is essential."The operators of the village hall, called the Ross Institute, now plans to diversify into new sectors to generate funds.Halkirk Village Council trustee Trish Bremner said: "We only just got broadband in the hall last year but, with our new reliable connectivity we see the potential for hosting conferences and weddings."

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Susskind's daughter sent him some music recently. He listened to it, and liked it. Then she told him it was AI-generated. 'In the future, AI just might be wildly better than us.' He wonders if, in years to come, we'll seek out human creations or interactions the way we today might prefer to spend money on handmade furniture rather than mass-produced goods. 'We might feel the same about literature, art and music, but I'm not sure our grandchildren will.' The coming of AI will shake humanity's sense of self to the foundations. No longer would we be the dominant intelligence on Earth. 'It will have a fundamental psychological effect on us and our perception of our position in the scheme of things. The idea of sharing the planet with entities more capable than us is deeply challenging.' Susskind speculates that if we get on top of AI early enough we can confine it to a 'zombie' status, where it has 'no consciousness, will, or awareness' but is just 'phenomenally capable but non-sentient'. He adds: 'Our perception of ourselves would be less diminished if we're simply sharing the planet with high-performing zombies.' But if AI becomes self-aware and conscious 'we'd move down a division'. Even if AI just gives the impression of consciousness it would still leave 'this huge question mark hanging over us'. Scottish author, speaker, and independent adviser to international professional firms and national governments Richard Susskind OBE has a new book out Explosion THE possibility exists that 'if we invent machines as intelligent as us then that will be our last invention'. The machine will become the inventor. This could lead to 'an intelligence explosion, where you go from AGI to a super-intelligence that's unfathomably more capable than us. When would this recursive self-improvement stop? That deeply concerns me'. This super-intelligence hypothesis – 'the AI-evolution hypothesis' – raises profound cosmologically questions. AI which continually self-improves at an astonishing rate could find ways to invent space travel and then 'spread out across the cosmos, in due course replacing us'. We'd be but a footnote: the creature which invented the most powerful 'mind' in the universe. 'I find such ideas fascinating and terrifying,' Susskind adds. An alternative hypothesis is the singularity 'which says that organic biological humans and digital machines will converge, so the next generation will be digitally-enhanced humans'. The problem with that theory is this: 'If the machines are so much more capable than us, the contribution humans make to this merger will fade over time. That might eliminate us.' Susskind's 'preoccupation' is that we will advance to AGI and 'that will lead to the super-intelligence hypothesis'. Among technologists, debate now rages over whether we should embrace the idea of super-advanced AI colonising the universe as 'our legacy', or if 'our obligation should be to preserve humanity'. Susskind comes down on the side of preserving humanity. 'I just think of my family, my friends and the joy humans have, and I want this for more people. My hope is that AGI can improve the wellbeing, health and happiness of humanity rather than populate the cosmos.' He's bewildered why society managed to have deep, intelligent debates in recent years about matters like genetic engineering but has failed to have a 'public conversation' about AI. If we built a system designed to save the world 'with AI' then, Susskind believes, we could genuinely 'eliminate disease and ill health. That's deliverable'. Each child could have a personalised tutor. Pupils would 'have Aristotle in the afternoon, then art lessons with Michelangelo'. With climate change, AI could 'develop and perfect new sources of power, ways of disposing of carbon – systems far more promising than we mere humans can put together'. 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'All the classic challenges that we've had since the dawn of civilisation come into sharp focus: how do we organise ourselves politically, what is a just distribution of resources, what is a happy, meaningful life?' Susskind says: 'If we develop AGI – and this does remain an 'if' but not an unlikely 'if' – then in my view this would represent the most significant discontinuity in the history of humanity and society. A greater leap than fire, agriculture, print or industry, partly because AI will match or outperform our most prized and distinguishing feature – our intellect, our brains, our minds.' He added that 'this revolution could well signal the end of pure homo sapiens, whether through the realisation of transhumanism – if/when we become digitally enhanced, perhaps as the next stage in our evolution – or as some cosmologists believe, we become extinct, in the very long run replaced by the unfathomably capable systems that we have invented. 'That is why I think the question 'what if AGI' is the most pressing and momentous question of our time. The future of humanity could be at stake.' Mind-bending metaphysical questions are raised by the advances of AI. The technology can now create highly convincing virtual reality worlds. So AGI could eventually create worlds indistinguishable from reality. 'It genuinely leads to the Matrix question,' Susskind adds. If a future AI super-intelligence could create a convincing virtual world, then that means today 'we can't be sure we're not in a virtual world'. In other words, we might already be a computer simulation in a digital universe created by AI. With technology, it is usually 'people from the dark side' who become early adopters, at a time 'unconstrained by rules, regulations, ethics and qualms'. That's why governments should consider taking power away from corporations and developing state-controlled AI systems. 'That seems to me a very serious policy option,' he adds. It would be one way of ensuring a fairer distribution of AI profits. Until a few years ago, Susskind was 'irreducibly optimistic about technology'. Today, he's both 'optimistic and pessimistic. AI could be channelled for massive human benefit, but the real risks are so profound that to not be fearful is irrational. That's my call to arms. The first thing we must do is understand what's going on'. Susskind adds: 'I advise governments. I'm closely connected to governments. I speak to lots of ministers all around the world.' But all he hears from those in power is 'how can we use ChatGPT, rather than any thinking about how, in 10 years, we're going to be in the biggest social crisis we've ever faced'. 'That's why I'm on this mission.'

Youngsters could face two-hour social media cap per app in online safety package
Youngsters could face two-hour social media cap per app in online safety package

Daily Mirror

timea day ago

  • Daily Mirror

Youngsters could face two-hour social media cap per app in online safety package

Technology Secretary Peter Kyle will announce a new 'package of measures' in a major drive to stop kids wasting their childhoods doomscrolling on social media on their phones Youngsters could have their time on social media capped at two hours per app under online safety measures being considered by ministers. The package could include blocking kids from accessing social media after 10pm and during school hours. ‌ Technology Secretary Peter Kyle is drawing up plans to stop kids wasting their childhoods doomscrolling on their phones. ‌ He told the Mirror his approach "will nail down some of the safety challenges that people face online". Talks have focused on curfews and restrictions on accessibility to apps in a drive to tackle a spiralling screen time crisis among teens. A two-hour cap per social media app has been suggested to ministers in the talks. Under the measure, kids would be blocked from accessing social media apps, such as TikTok or Snapchat, once they have reached the limit. Officials admit this won't solve the problem completely as kids could still rack up screen time across multiple apps but believe it could be a starting point. ‌ Mr Kyle and his team have been in discussions with current and past employees of social media firms, who have suggested they'd be prepared to block kids' access at night, during school or after a certain amount of time using an app. No decision has been made on what age bracket could apply. Elsewhere, officials have also looked at raising the legal digital age of consent from 13 to 16. ‌ This is the age at which a child may give consent for their personal data to be processed by online sites. But insiders believe this is not a silver bullet, as there is little evidence of a huge impact in countries that have introduced the move. Mr Kyle is expected to make a major intervention in the coming months setting out new measures to improve kids' relationship with the online world. ‌ The Cabinet minister told the Mirror: "I have been working really hard on a package of measures that will move online safety forwards under this Labour government, and I can't wait to start talking about it when I have the opportunity in the not too distant future. "But I can say right now that my approach will nail down some of the safety challenges that people face online, but also start to embrace those measures that deliver a much healthier life for children online, and that's what I want young people to have, a developmental safe and nourishing childhood online, just as we strive to for young people offline." In April, the regulator Ofcom published a new children's code instructing social media firms to tame toxic algorithms, take faster action on removing harmful content and introduce robust age verification measures. ‌ Age checks must be vigorous, with Ofcom recommending online platforms use measures including photo ID matching and facial recognition estimation to ensure below-aged kids can't create accounts on their sites. This should also mean online sites have better access to a user's age if they were asked to impose measures such as curfews on younger people. ‌ If tech giants don't stick to Ofcom's new rules from next month(JULY), they could be fined up to 10% of global revenue or, in the worst cases, have access to their platforms banned in the UK. In April, Mr Kyle celebrated the "first step" in the journey to improving kids' safety but admitted the UK's online safety laws are "lopsided" and more action is needed. He has since been taking a step back to think about how the addictive nature of phones and social media is "disrupting the childhood experience". ‌ Parents have been crying out for action to help their kids curb the amount of time spent behind their phone screens. A major report released by Ofcom last year(2024) found almost half (49%) of parents of teens aged 16-17 said they were concerned about their children's screen time. But it also found young people are similarly worried. ‌ Just over a third (35%) of eight to 17 year olds said their own screen time is too high, which rose to 44% among those aged 16 to 17. Keir Starmer has faced calls to prioritise online safety amid concerning levels of suicide, self-harm, anxiety and depression linked to social media use among teens. Ian Russell, whose 14-year-old daughter Molly took her own life in 2017 after viewing harmful posts online, has called for the Government to make tackling online harms its legacy. ‌ "What is needed is for the Prime Minister to champion online safety," he told The Mirror in April. "The lead has to come from Keir himself. There's never really been a Prime Minister who's championed online safety and it's time there was." A major report released by Ofcom last year(2024) found almost half (49%) of parents of teens aged 16-17 said they were concerned about their children's screen time.

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