Israel’s using AI to find Gaza targets. Experts are worried. - podcast episode cover

Israel’s using AI to find Gaza targets. Experts are worried.

Dec 19, 202310 min
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Episode description

This episode contains a segment about pregnancy loss.

Israel is using an AI system to find targets in Gaza. Critics see a host of problems. NPR finds out what experts are saying.

Allie Phillips was denied an abortion. Now she’s running for office. Elle has the story.

The Wall Street Journal reports on how kids are now using slide decks to avoid the holiday dread of unwanted gifts.

Transcript

[MUSIC FADES IN]

Shumita Basu, Narrating

Good morning! It's Tuesday December 19th. I'm Shumita Basu. This is "Apple News Today." On today's show, how Israel's military is using Al to target Gaza, the Tennessee woman who was denied an abortion and is now running for office, and how kids are making the case for holiday gifts using corporate slide decks.

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

Shumita Basu, Narrating

But first, let's take a quick look at some major stories in the news. More than 125 people are dead after a 6.2 magnitude earthquake hit northwest China. It's the country's deadliest quake in about a decade. There's currently a brutal cold wave there, meaning rescue efforts are harder because of sub-freezing conditions. Survivors trapped under rubble can typically live for three days. But the dangerous cold is expected to make the rescue window much shorter.

In Texas, an immigration law just signed by Governor Greg Abbott gives local law enforcement the power to arrest immigrants entering illegally from Mexico. Legal critics say the law is unconstitutional, because immigration enforcement is the federal government's territory. Advocates for migrants say the law will lead to racial profiling and harassment, they plan to sue. Abbott says Texas needs the law because the Biden administration isn't doing enough to secure the border.

In other news, Marvel is dropping actor Jonathan Majors, after he was found guilty of misdemeanor counts of assault and harassment. He was on trial for attacking his ex-girlfriend in New York in March. Majors was slated to appear in some of Marvel's upcoming superhero movies. He could face up to a year in prison.

And there's a massive volcano erupting in Iceland. Scientists are watching this after weeks of seismic activity. The "BBC" spoke to Hallgrimur Indridason from Icelandic broadcaster "RUV."

[START BBC ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Hallgrimur Indridason

This is the fourth eruption in the Reykjanes Peninsula in almost three years. And this is by far the strongest one.

[END BBC ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Hallgrimur Indridason

Early indications are that the eruption isn't expected to destroy any homes. And there's no sign that the smoke will disrupt international flights. You can see some striking images of the eruption on the Apple News app.

[ELECTRONIC MUSIC]

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

Hallgrimur Indridason

We are entering a new phase of artificial intelligence and warfare. Since the Hamas attacks in Israel on October 7th, the Israeli military has hit tens of thousands of targets in Gaza. Close to 20,000 Palestinians have died, according to local health authorities. Israel's military says it's using artificial intelligence to help choose some targets. But critics say the system is unproven and potentially dangerous to civilians.

Heidi Khlaaf, an Al expert at a technology security firm, told "NPR" about the risks.

[START NPR ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Heidi Khlaaf

You're ultimately looking at imprecise and biased target automation that's really not far from indiscriminate targeting.

[END NPR ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Heidi Khlaaf

Israel's Al system is called "the Gospel." And the idea is that it can search through massive troves of data to help identify enemy targets 50 times faster, and with more accuracy than human intelligence teams. It's not clear what information the system uses exactly, but one expert says it could include cell phone messages, drone footage, and satellite imagery. But that information can be misinterpreted or misleading, for a human or an Al system.

Beyond the technical questions, there are ethical ones. Khlaaf, again speaking to "NPR," worries that an increased use of this technology will complicate questions of ultimate responsibility.

[START NPR ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Khlaaf

It then becomes impossible to trace decisions to specific design points that can hold any individuals or military accountable for an Al's actions.

[END NPR ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Khlaaf

Israel's military has said in the past that the Gospel Al system makes recommendations, which are then reviewed by humans before strikes are launched. Debates over the promise and risk of Al are happening in many areas. But when it comes to its use in war, the stakes are especially high. That's why experts are watching the use of Al in Gaza, and in other conflicts, and urging military leaders to use the technology carefully.

[SOMBER MUISC]

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

Khlaaf

A warning that this next story deals with pregnancy loss.

Tennessee House candidate Allie Phillips has a backstory like a lot of first-time candidates

she was angry about an issue. And she's turning that passion into a run for office. What stands out about Phillips is that the issue is abortion access, and that she's been using TikTok to tell her very personal story of how the state of Tennessee blocked her from getting the procedure even when she faced a dangerous complication. In one post, she describes how she got the news that her fetus had fatal health issues that could put Phillips' life at risk as well.

[START TIKTOK ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Allie Phillips

So when I asked what the next steps were, she said, if you guys so decide you can terminate the pregnancy. [SNIFFS] Because I live in Tennessee, I can't do that here. So I'm going to have to travel out of state. Or, she said if we decided to continue with the pregnancy, we risk having a stillborn or giving birth to her for her to just die shortly after delivery.

[END TIKTOK ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Allie Phillips

So, she traveled to New York for the procedure. There Phillips learned that her baby, who she had named Miley, had died and that she was at risk of sepsis. She continued to share the aftermath with her followers.

[START TIKTOK ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Phillips

I did not expect to have this update. [SOBS] But they just did the sonogram and Miley's heartbeat isn't there anymore. She's already passed.

[END TIKTOK ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Phillips

Six months after going public with her abortion story, Phillips announced her campaign on TikTok.

[START TIKTOK ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Phillips

We are controlled by these legislators who are pro-life and think an unborn fetus. has more rights than a living, breathing person. How do I change that? Well, I decided that I'm going to run for my house district.

[END TIKTOK ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Phillips

"Elle Magazine" recently wrote about Phillips and how abortion bans are motivating women across the country to run for office. Phillips is among the first people in the post-Roe era to announce her candidacy after being denied an abortion. Another woman with a similar experience is planning to run for office in Louisiana. Some candidates are using TikTok to share their deeply personal and emotional stories, to fundraise for their campaigns, and to reach voters in a whole new way.

[MELLOW MUSIC]

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

Phillips

When you were a kid, you might've written out your holiday gift wish list on paper, hopefully with good penmanship, and remembering to say please. But these days it's not so simple. Kids are taking a cue from corporate America, presenting their wish list as a slide deck. Just listen to little Hayden in this social media post. She's standing in a pink tracksuit, gesturing to the slides behind her on the TV screen.

[START TIKTOK ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Hayden

Presenting Hayden's Christmas list.

Unidentified Speaker 1

Did you stick to a budget? What's a budget? Next!

[END TIKTOK ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Unidentified Speaker 1

"The Wall Street Journal" reports on this trend of kids creating decks to persuade their parents to buy them presents. Jenna Bush Hager recently talked about this on "NBC." Her 10-year-old daughter put together a deck when she wanted a kid-friendly debit card.

[START NBC ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Jenna Bush Hager

She did a PowerPoint presentation on why she was responsible enough now and what chores she would do. And how she wanted to learn how to save.

Unidentified Speaker 2

My gosh!

Hager

And how she wants to buy presents for her siblings at Christmas on her own.

[END NBC ARCHIVAL CLIP]

Hager

She said, the kid made some good points and it worked. The "Journal" also tells the story of Eleven-year-old Ben who prepared a nine-page deck telling his family about NBA jerseys and Xbox games that he wants. Twelve-year-old Abby put together 29 slides, asking for things like velour track pants and skin-care products.

Now this trend is not news to companies that make slide-deck software. Canva has holiday wish list templates. It says they were used more than three million times in the month leading up to Black Friday. Not all parents are on board with mixing holiday fun with corporate slide decks. But some parents told the "Journal," they see this as harmless, a tech twist on the old-fashioned wish list, maybe even good practice for future negotiations and presentations, even if the kids don't get everything they want.

[MUSIC FADES IN]

Hager

You can find all these stories and more in the Apple News app. And if you're already listening in the News app right now, we've got a Narrated Article coming up next from "Bloomberg Businessweek." It looks at the problem of online manipulation of real people's photos to make fake nudes. Law enforcement is way behind the deepfake technology here, so a group of young women who were victimized decided to fight back their own way.

If you're listening in the Podcasts app, follow Apple News+ Narrated to find that story. And I'll be back with the news tomorrow.

[MUSIC FADES OUT]

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