In Wired: Spam does seem like a far less common occurrence these days. Using neural methods. Now can we address other forms of malware?
" ... Three years after it last released Gmail’s spam stats, Google says that its spam rate is down to 0.1 percent, and its false positive rate has dipped to 0.05 percent. The company credits the significant drop in large part to the introduction of brain-like “neural networks” into its spam filters that can learn to recognize junk mail and phishing messages by analyzing scads off the stuff across an enormous collection of computers. ... "
Thursday, July 09, 2015
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