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Trump Claims Administration Learnt to Avoid Signal After Group Chat Leak

 

President Donald Trump stated that his administration has learnt from Signalgate. "I think we learnt: Maybe don't use Signal, okay?" Trump spoke about the messaging app in an interview with The Atlantic published Monday.

"If you want to know the truth. I would frankly tell these people not to use Signal, although it's been used by a lot of people," US president added. "But, whatever it is, whoever has it, whoever owns it, I wouldn't want to use it.”

Last month, The Atlantic's editor in chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, revealed that he had been inadvertently included in a Signal group discussion by White House national security adviser Mike Waltz. Goldberg stated that the group chat was called "Houthi PC small group" and included other officials such as Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, and Secretary of State Marco Rubio. "PC" stood for "principals committee." 

"In the chat, Waltz and the other Trump officials were talking about specifics of a planned U.S. strike on Houthi rebels," Goldberg claimed. The authenticity of the group discussion was later verified by the National Security Council to Business Insider. At first, Trump denied knowing about the security failure. After the incident, he defended Waltz and Hegseth, stating that he would not fire them. 

Signal, which was first launched in 2014, is a non-profit, open-source encrypted messaging application. Last month, Signal stated in an X post that misinformation was "flying around that might drive people away from Signal and private communications.”

"One piece of misinformation we need to address is the claim that there are 'vulnerabilities' in Signal," it stated on March 25, citing an NPR report that quoted a Pentagon memo it received, alerting staff of a possible vulnerability in the messaging app. 

“The memo used the term 'vulnerability' in relation to Signal — but it had nothing to do with Signal's core tech. It was warning against phishing scams targeting Signal users,” Signal wrote in its post.

Prez Biden Signs AI Executive Order for Monitoring AI Policies


On November 2, US President Joe Biden signed a new comprehensive executive order detailing intentions for business control and governmental monitoring of artificial intelligence. The legislation, released on October 30, aims at addressing several widespread issues in regard to privacy concerns, bias and misinformation enabled by the high-end AI technology that is becoming more and more ingrained in the contemporary world. 

The White House's Executive Order Fact Sheet makes it obvious that US regulatory authorities aim to both try to govern and benefit from the vast spectrum of emerging and rebranded "artificial intelligence" technologies, even though the solutions are still primarily conceptual.

The administrator’s executive order aims at creating new guidelines for the security and safety of AI use. By applying the Defense Production Act, the order directs businesses to provide US regulators with safety test results and other crucial data whenever they are developing AI that could present a "serious risk" for US military, economic, or public security. However, it is still unclear who will be monitoring these risks and to what extent. 

Nevertheless, prior to the public distribution of any such AI programs, the National Institute of Standards and Technology will shortly establish safety requirements that must be fulfilled.

In regards to the order, Ben Buchanan, the White House Senior Advisor for AI said, “I think in many respects AI policy is like running a decathlon, where we don’t get to pick and choose which events we do[…]We have to do safety and security, we have to do civil rights and equity, we have to do worker protections, consumer protections, the international dimension, government use of AI, [while] making sure we have a competitive ecosystem here.”

“Probably some of [order’s] most significant actions are [setting] standards for AI safety, security, and trust. And then require that companies notify us of large-scale AI development, and that they share the tests of those systems in accordance with those standards[…]Before it goes out to the public, it needs to be safe, secure, and trustworthy,” Mr. Buchanan added. 

A Long Road Ahead

In an announcement made by President Biden on Monday, he urged Congress to enact bipartisan data privacy legislation to “protect all Americans, especially kids,” from AI risks. 

While several US states like Massachusetts, California, Virginia, and Colorado have agreed on passing the legislation, the US however lacks comprehensive legal safeguards akin to the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR).

GDPR, enacted in 2018, severely limits how businesses can access the personal data of their customers. If they are found to be violating the law, they may as well face hefty fines. 

However, according to Sarah Kreps, professor of government and director of the Tech Policy Institute at Cornell University, the White House's most recent requests for data privacy laws "are unlikely to be answered[…]Both sides concur that action is necessary, but they cannot agree on how it should be carried out."