christinaayiotis.bsky.social profile picture

Christina Ayiotis

@christinaayiotis.bsky.social

736 Followers

493 Following

Mom, Cook, Cyber/AI/Privacy Lawyer, World Traveler, Cross-Pollinator, Continuous Learner (MY PERSONAL OPINIONS ONLY)

  1. “Elon Musk's artificial intelligence startup xAI has sued a former engineer at the company for allegedly stealing trade secrets related to its Grok chatbot and taking them to rival OpenAI.” www.reuters.com/legal/litiga... @reuters.com

    Elon Musk's artificial intelligence startup xAI has sued a former engineer at the company for allegedly stealing trade secrets related to its Grok chatbot and taking them to rival OpenAI.

    Musk's xAI sues engineer for allegedly taking secrets to OpenAI

    Elon Musk's artificial intelligence startup xAI has sued a former engineer at the company for allegedly stealing trade secrets related to its Grok chatbot and taking them to rival OpenAI.

    0
  2. “A nation that cannot protect its cables cannot credibly defend its sovereignty. But a nation too divided to protect its people cannot defend anything at all.” www.aspistrategist.org.au/threads-that...

    My daughter recently asked me what makes Australia worth fighting for. I started with the usual answers about freedom and democracy, but she wasn’t convinced. What she understood better were the thing...

    Threads that bind: cables, community and Australia’s defence | The Strategist

    My daughter recently asked me what makes Australia worth fighting for. I started with the usual answers about freedom and democracy, but she wasn’t convinced. What she understood better were the thing...

    0
  3. “The US$300 billion AI lab's path to Australia was not long and winding and followed sustained overtures from the Labor government and a deal with the nation's biggest company.” www.capitalbrief.com/article/how-...

    The US$300 billion AI lab's path to Australia was not long and winding and followed sustained overtures from the Labor government and a deal with the nation's biggest company.

    How Labor and CBA enticed OpenAI to Australian shores

    The US$300 billion AI lab's path to Australia was not long and winding and followed sustained overtures from the Labor government and a deal with the nation's biggest company.

    0
  4. “The Spanish government has intervened at the eleventh hour to cancel a contract that would have boosted the use of Chinese tech giant Huawei’s fibre optic equipment across the country, citing ‘strategic autonomy’.” www.scmp.com/news/china/a...

    Last-minute decision comes as Madrid faces pressure from Brussels and Washington over China security concerns.

    Spain cancels fibre-optic service contract involving use of Huawei equipment

    Last-minute decision comes as Madrid faces pressure from Brussels and Washington over China security concerns.

    0
  5. “Twenty leaders — including from Russia, Iran and India — will gather for a forum, part of Beijing’s efforts to be seen as a reliable counterweight to the U.S.” www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/0... @washingtonpost.com

    Twenty leaders — including from Russia, Iran and India — will gather for a forum, part of Beijing’s efforts to be seen as a reliable counterweight to the U.S.

    China tries to use Trump turmoil to unite leaders against U.S.-led order

    Twenty leaders — including from Russia, Iran and India — will gather for a forum, part of Beijing’s efforts to be seen as a reliable counterweight to the U.S.

    0
  6. “ ‘The industry needs a new way to fully manage the #AI agent lifecycle: an identity-security standard that gives enterprises confidence in what agents can access and gives developers freedom to build experiences that are secure and seamless by default,’ “ www.scworld.com/resource/ai-...

    AI security is a mess, and AI vendors, developers and users need to collaborate in formulating stronger standards.

    AI agents need both tougher standards and stricter identity controls

    AI security is a mess, and AI vendors, developers and users need to collaborate in formulating stronger standards.

    0
  7. “ ‘I think the misinformation is pretty rife,’ Dr Nickel says. ‘It is really concerning when it's this medical and health advice being given, and most of the time the people lacked the credentials to do so.’ “ www.abc.net.au/news/2025-09... @abcnewsbot.bsky.social

    Two-thirds of teenagers get their health advice on social media, but a researcher says much of it is a "waste of time and money" and at worst, potentially harmful.

    Teens warned misinformation about health is 'rife' on social media

    Two-thirds of teenagers get their health advice on social media, but a researcher says much of it is a "waste of time and money" and at worst, potentially harmful.

    0