惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Recorded Future
Recorded Future
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
S
Security Archives - TechRepublic
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
AI
AI
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
Security Latest
Security Latest
T
Tor Project blog
P
Privacy International News Feed
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
L
LINUX DO - 最新话题
D
DataBreaches.Net
W
WeLiveSecurity
H
Help Net Security
L
LangChain Blog
B
Blog RSS Feed
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
C
Cisco Blogs
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
O
OpenAI News
I
InfoQ
GbyAI
GbyAI
Project Zero
Project Zero
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
Jina AI
Jina AI
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More
博客园 - 聂微东
美团技术团队
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Y
Y Combinator Blog
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC

Silicon Republic

After Amazon, Google commits up to $40bn in Anthropic Cohere buys Aleph Alpha to forge sovereign AI alternative to US Big Tech 4 easy ways to stay on top of cybersecurity in the workplace 15 companies you’ll see at NIBRT Careers in Biopharma 2026 Bloomberg: Bezos’ Project Prometheus bags $10bn at $38bn value Meta to lay off 10pc of its workforce amid an AI push China's DeepSeek unveils long-awaited V4 AI model Intel’s shares soar as Q1 results signal brighter future MongoDB to create 200 new jobs as it invests €74m into Irish operations Why it's full STEAM ahead for young people upskilling in Ireland's west Swedish legal-tech Legora buys AI legal research start-up Qura Belfast’s Cloudsmith eyes ‘massive growth’ with $72m raise France's Univity raises €27m to allow European telecoms compete with Starlink France's Univity raises €27m to allow European telecoms to compete with Starlink AI race intensifies with Google's new agent management platform Government launches new AI initiative for greater access to essential skills Free and inexpensive cybersecurity courses to undertake in 2026 UL looking for ‘changemakers’ amid Research Week 2026 OpenAI taps Airbnb exec as first EMEA managing director EAM platform Blue Mountain acquires Cork’s CompuCal Calibration Solutions SpaceX agrees right to buy AI coding darling Cursor for $60bn Anthropic probing reported Mythos leak on Discord Professional job openings across Ireland increased in Q1, finds report Contract hiring evidence of a cautious jobs market, finds report Can you rely on AI chatbots for medical advice? €6.9m awarded to final four National Challenge Fund winners Amazon investing up to $25bn in Anthropic AI infrastructure deal Vodafone Ireland to invest €360m over the next four years Tim Cook passes Apple leadership to hardware head John Ternus Stripe alum's Seapoint raises €7.5m as ‘financial home’ to start-ups When it comes to leadership, do companies know what they are doing? Amazon gets go-ahead for subsea cable landing station in Cork Communication and storytelling key skills, finds strategy manager Space-tech Mbryonics plans new production facility in Shannon Irish co-founded AI start-up Lua raises $5.8m AIM Centre strengthening medtech and life sciences link with new Galway base Kerry Group expands Cork facility as lactose-free demand grows Are electric vehicles about to take off for good? Nearly 75pc of AI’s economic value captured by just 20pc of companies Major gap between leaders' traits and employee expectations, finds report Dublin tech company Vox Talk raises €1.35m in pre-seed round Netflix shares fall on Q2 forecast as co-founder Hastings steps aside OpenAI to rival Google’s AlphaFold with new AI model for life sciences research Irish-founded Ulysses raises $46m in rounds featuring A16Z How are balance, inclusion and skills critical to the workforce of the future? Anthropic’s Mythos to bolster cybersecurity at UK banks Solidroad raises $25m as demand for QA product sparks fresh hiring Are we ready to place lab experiments in non-human hands? Danish finance AI start-up Spektr raises $20m What interview mistakes are jobseekers still making in 2026? Irish space AI start-up Ubotica on board for NASA’s FAME Dublin's Audrey AI closes $1.8m pre-seed funding round The Leaders' Room: Equinix's Peter Lantry on powering Ireland sustainably ‘No more excuses’ as EU launches free age verification app Waterford's HCS unveils €13.2m investment, plans 125 new jobs Waterford's HCS unveils €13.2m investment, plans 125 new jobs The death of ETL: Is zero-copy a ‘liberation’ for data teams? Snap cuts 16pc workforce to prioritise AI and savings Do data and AI talent needs conflict with a workforce seeking stability? Amazon buys Globalstar to bolster Leo's satellite capabilities Dublin start-up Otel AI raises €2m to expand hotel AI platform Boston Scientific announces €75m R&D investment in Galway After Anthropic, OpenAI launches cyber-specific AI model ASML forecasts €36bn in 2026 net sales amid AI race chip demand The Interview: Dentons' Carlo Salizzo on three forces defining digital law How this master’s programme is building tech leadership talent Nvidia unveils open-source quantum AI model Ising Bull and Equal1 to advance next gen of hybrid quantum tech in Europe Anthropic's Mythos a game-changer, NCSC chief tells Oireachtas Klaviyo building out its engineering team at Dublin facility Stanford: China ‘effectively’ closes AI model performance gap to US Mythos just first of power models to come: Anthropic co-founder Ireland to invest €17m in leading facilities for AI, medtech and more UK neobank Monzo makes Irish launch after US market exit How can you make your memory work more effectively? Cork Airport to get Ireland's largest solar carport next year New XP95 hacker group targets Dublin recruitment platform Healthdaq OpenAI apps for MacOS exposed by threat Mythos testing begins as governments raise cyber concerns The biopharma senior associate whose career was fuelled by FUEL Opinion: The future of insurance is AI, so why the hesitation? Meta to pay CoreWeave $21bn for additional cloud capacity Investing in part of the workforce creates an AI skills gap, finds report Digital rights group EFF leaves X Alibaba leads $293m round in Chinese AI start-up after HappyHorse reveal Anthropic reportedly mulls designing own chips amid shortage How are software engineering graduates adjusting to AI? OpenAI pauses Stargate UK over energy costs The diverse responsibilities of a principal software engineer Dublin AI SaaS provider Apex B2B launches with €1.5m backing Equal1 partners with Q-Ctrl for quantum data centre deployment Meta’s Superintelligence Labs debuts first product Muse Spark US court won't pause Anthropic ban, but wants case expedited Agentic commerce and purchase disputes: Did you mean to buy that? New Artemis II images give fresh look at our lunar neighbour Circuléire makes fresh call for 2026 accelerator applicants ‘Positive workplace culture starts with respect, trust and communication' Anthropic's Glasswing project employs Mythos to prevent AI cyberattacks Medtech start-up Vertigenius raises €2.55m for US expansion Meath ITAD provider ICT acquired by US recycling firm Paladin
For conservation experts, is AI a powerful tool or dangerous shortcut?
silicon · 2026-06-15 · via Silicon Republic

Jeran Cloete and Dian Spear of Stellenbosch University, Jessica da Silva of the South African National Biodiversity Institute, Lavhelesani Dembe Simba of Fort Hare and Peter J Carrick at the University of Cape Town discuss AI’s use in conservation efforts.

Conservationists analyse overwhelming volumes of ecological data in their work. For example, they might need to process decades of weather data or the movements of millions of insects. Up until now, these scientists and decision makers have had to manually find and sort information, then use statistical tools which often oversimplify the source information.

Artificial intelligence (AI) tools now promise to help with all that. But can they deliver on the promise?

They are far from perfect. It’s been shown that they can confidently make up information and amplify hidden biases in their training data. And different AI tools have different uses, strengths and weaknesses. They need to be chosen carefully.

AI featured among the top 10 emerging issues in biodiversity conservation in South Africa in a recent horizon scan that we undertook. As part of a group of 14 experts in biodiversity conservation, we drew on discussions within our diverse professional networks, literature and news trends to identify issues likely to emerge and intensify over the next 5-10 years.

The issues fell into three main groups: technological disruption; regulatory complexity; and infrastructure impacts.

Among them, AI featured as both an opportunity and a risk for future biodiversity conservation.

AI opportunities

Our scan brought to the surface the power and pitfalls of AI in the kind of work we do.

One potential use of AI is in tracking. Tracking animals and insects at scale is essential for conservation decisions. Birds and whales migrate across the planet every year, and insect numbers change through the seasons in the billions. Image recognition AI can process camera trap data to help populate databases such as Wildlife Insights and provide information about animal behaviour to help predict the impacts of global processes like climate change and industrial development on biodiversity.

Mass monitoring also records people sharing those landscapes with animals. This surveillance can be used to detect illegal wildlife harvesting (poaching) or avoid human-animal conflict.

Land use is another area of conservation where AI offers opportunities. Using economic data together with landscape information, custom AI models can be trained to predict deforestation, allowing preventive action, or choose land with high conservation value for the best price.

Ecosystem complexity needs to be summarised and condensed into maps and categories to inform broad landscape-level decisions. Using AI increases the amount of data that can be summarised.

Chatbots are one kind of AI tool that can distil information from huge amounts of text. For example, they can be used to monitor product listings and detect illegal wildlife trade online the moment it occurs. They can read hundreds of scientific publications to help decide which species are at risk of extinction. They can draw on many different sources to create environmental impact assessments; the basis of land development decisions, offering a tempting shortcut around a time-consuming reporting task.

But we also identified downsides and risks.

The risks

Local communities living off the land might experience the mass surveillance as an intrusion. Alienation of local communities in this way could cause them to oppose conservation governance and sabotage technology in the field to protect their privacy.

Another challenge is that the technology itself has limitations. Using AI for tracking animals means specially training image and audio identification systems to work with each ecosystem and piece of hardware. An AI model is only as good as the effort that was put into teaching it. For example, training a model on recordings from a city might cause it to “hear” pigeons everywhere, producing a confident but incomplete list of birds from natural area data.

Another worry about AI is that replacing human involvement could lead to job losses. When used for animal identification, it could contribute to an ongoing decline in taxonomy knowledge which is more severe in biodiversity-rich, low-income countries in Africa. That knowledge is essential for improving and correcting AI systems.

We also found reasons for concern in land use applications.

The risk is that using AI tools for map making could disconnect the map from reality on the ground by replacing human judgment in the field and favouring data sources compatible with AI methods. A skilled ecologist surveying an ecosystem will notice unexpected things that were not specified during the planning stage. For example, speaking with local people may reveal planned farming expansion or harvesting wildlife activities. An AI system would miss this critical context because it can only read information that has been digitised.

AI can’t see animals that evade cameras or identify animals that were not expected to occur in that location (images that it was not trained on). It also can’t speak to humans to discover their intentions or uncover ecological wisdom passed down from their ancestors.

Chatbots too need to be used with caution. They can generate or embed fictional information. Even when drawing on real information, they often reflect bias in their training data, favouring research and perspectives from well-represented institutions in the global north, where publications have historically been dominated by men in high-income universities.

Uncritical use of chatbot-generated recommendations could lead to poor environmental decisions. For example, it might suggest planting trees without considering diverse ecosystems like Africa’s savannah grasslands.

Using chatbots as a shortcut to summarise knowledge and inform conservation decisions in Africa will reinforce colonial systems and marginalise indigenous communities and knowledge.

Careful use of AI

Strong regulation of the use of AI in environmental science is therefore a moral and legal imperative. The sector needs clear safeguards, standards and oversight mechanisms to prevent faulty or inappropriate AI outputs from influencing decisions. It needs:

  • validation protocols to catch fabricated information
  • limitations to prevent chatbots from overriding human knowledge and perspectives
  • mandatory disclosure of AI prompt histories
  • standards for describing training datasets so that appropriate models can be selected.

The explosion of AI presents a powerful opportunity for conservation if we use the right tools with care. If we replace human judgment with unchecked automation, we risk becoming tools of the very systems we built.

The Conversation

Jeran Cloete

Jeran Cloete is a PhD candidate in conservation ecology and entomology, at Stellenbosch University.

Dian Spear

Dian Spear is a senior research scientist at Stellenbosch University.

Jessica da Silva

Jessica da Silva is a principal scientist at the South African National Biodiversity Institute.

Lavhelesani Dembe Simba

Lavhelesani Dembe Simba is a lecturer of entomology at the University of Fort Hare.

Peter J Carrick

Peter J Carrick is an honorary research fellow at the Institute for Communities and Wildlife in Africa, for the University of Cape Town.

Don’t miss out on the knowledge you need to succeed. Sign up for the Daily Brief, Silicon Republic’s digest of need-to-know sci-tech news.