Huntsville man among four charged in scheme to illegally export AI chips to China

Huntsville man among four charged in scheme to illegally export AI chips to China HUNTSVILLE, Ala. (WAFF) - Federal authorities have charged four people with conspiring to illegally export advanced NVIDIA graphics processing units (GPUs) — technology with significant artificial intelligence and national security applications — to China. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the group allegedly worked together to bypass U.S. export controls and ship restricted technology overseas by falsifying documents, creating fake contracts, and misleading authorities. Those arrested include: Hon Ning “Mathew” Ho, 34, a U.S. citizen born in Hong Kong and living in Tampa, Florida Brian Curtis Raymond, 46, a U.S. citizen from Huntsville, Alabama Reference: www.waff.com

Alabama schools are seeing an increase in ransomware, phishing and other cybersecurity attacks, officials say.

Alabama schools are seeing an increase in ransomware, phishing and other cybersecurity attacks, officials say.

Alabama schools are seeing an increase in ransomware, phishing and other cybersecurity attacks, officials say. ...The biggest threat, ASA officials said, is when attackers trick people into clicking on malicious links in an email, a practice called phishing. Employees can unknowingly click on links that either install malware or otherwise obtain information from the network it has hooked into.

Reference: www.govtech.com

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