Mayo Clinic And NVIDIA Collaborate On AI Models For Early Disease Detection - 1

Image by Mayo Clinic

Mayo Clinic And NVIDIA Collaborate On AI Models For Early Disease Detection

  • Written by Kiara Fabbri Former Tech News Writer
  • Fact-Checked by Sarah Frazier Former Content Manager

Mayo Clinic is accelerating AI-powered healthcare by deploying NVIDIA Blackwell infrastructure to improve disease detection, drug discovery, and digital pathology.

In a rush? Here are the quick facts:

  • AI models will target digital pathology, precision medicine, and drug discovery.
  • The Atlas model trained on 1.2 million pathology slides improves clinical accuracy.
  • Infrastructure reduces weeks of AI training to just one week.

Mayo Clinic announced it will be introducing NVIDIA’s DGX SuperPOD with Blackwell-powered DGX B200 systems for high-performance computing to support Mayo’s upcoming AI-based medical tools.

The partnership between Mayo Clinic and NVIDIA aims to speed up the development of foundation models for healthcare applications, especially in digital pathology, drug discovery, and precision medicine.

Dr. Matthew Callstrom, who leads Mayo’s Department of Strategy, stated: “Our aspiration for AI is to meaningfully improve patient outcomes by detecting disease early enough to intervene.”

“What was once a hypothetical — ‘If only we had the right data’ — is now becoming reality thanks to AI and advanced computing,” he added.

Mayo Clinic states that this new infrastructure enables the analysis of extensive medical images at a significantly faster rate than before, thus reducing certain tasks from four weeks to one week.

One of these new models is Atlas, a digital pathology foundation model created in collaboration with Aignostics. Mayo Clinic reports that Atlas was trained on over 1.2 million high-resolution pathology images to enhance diagnostic precision and decrease administrative tasks for medical professionals.

“This compute power, coupled with Mayo’s unparalleled clinical expertise and platform data of over 20 million digitized pathology slides, will allow Mayo to build on its existing foundation models,” said Jim Rogers, CEO of Mayo Clinic Digital Pathology.

“We’re transforming healthcare by quickly and safely developing innovative AI solutions that can improve patient outcomes and enable clinicians to dedicate more time to patient care,” he added.

Despite the Mayo Clinic’s promising advances with AI in medical imaging, experts caution against overreliance on these technologies due to several risks.

Recent research published in Pneumon argues that AI systems depend on large datasets, which raises serious concerns about the privacy, security, and confidentiality of sensitive patient information. Increasingly, hacking attempts target such data, sometimes as part of larger cyberattacks.

Another critical issue is data bias, where the underrepresentation of minorities and groups in data leads to inaccurate and unfair AI model results, which negatively affect the care received by these groups.

Additionally, the researchers warn of “data poisoning,” where data is intentionally manipulated to cause errors, threatening the reliability of AI diagnoses and clinical trials.

There are also unresolved legal and ethical questions about who is responsible when AI systems make mistakes. Furthermore, the overuse of AI technology leads to diminished medical expertise among doctors because it creates a phenomenon known as the “lazy doctor” effect.

These challenges highlight the need for cautious, well-regulated AI integration, ongoing validation, and strong safeguards to ensure AI supports, not replaces, medical expertise.

Romance Scam Delivers Malware Hidden In ‘Lovely Photos’ File - 2

Image by Joshua Reddekopp, from Unsplash

Romance Scam Delivers Malware Hidden In ‘Lovely Photos’ File

  • Written by Kiara Fabbri Former Tech News Writer
  • Fact-Checked by Sarah Frazier Former Content Manager

A new cyberattack is targeting German speakers with adult-themed romance scams, secretly delivering malware.

In a rush? Here are the quick facts:

  • The attack targets German speakers using adult-themed romance scam emails.
  • Emails contain links to ISO malware hosted on Russian servers.
  • Keitaro TDS filters victims by location and time.

According to Sublime Security , the attackers use two deceptive links to entice victims by luring them via a romantic email.

The first link looks like a video preview image, yet the second link leads to a disguised archive file. If clicked, the system checks if the user is in Germany. If so, it downloads a 300MB ISO file from a Russian server.

The researchers explain that the attackers use Keitaro TDS, a commercial traffic distribution system, to target users during their working hours through this malicious campaign.

“Keitaro is able to view many characteristics of the computer, making the request and providing connection paths,” Sublime explained. This targeted precision increases the chances of success.

Once downloaded, the ISO file evades detection by inflating its size. When mounted, it reveals a file called ‘lovely_photos.exe’ and a text file with a password. Running the file prompts the user for that password, which triggers the extraction of explicit images and multiple malicious files.

The malware builds an AutoIt interpreter to run a heavily disguised script, designed to bypass antivirus software. “The final AutoIt script is extensively obfuscated […] over 11,500 lines of code,” Sublime noted. The script installs itself as a scheduled Windows task called DragonMapper, ensuring the malware runs every time the user logs in.

This campaign highlights the increasing sophistication of social engineering attacks and how threat actors are now combining adult scams with anti-analysis techniques and legitimate tools like AutoIt and Keitaro TDS to remain undetected.