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Today in AI is a daily recap of the latest news and developments in the AI industry. See your story and want to be featured in an upcoming episode? Reach out at tonyphoang.com The Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas revealed groundbreaking automotive innovations from companies like Hyundai Mobis, BMW, and Honda. These innovations include advanced holographic displays, highly customizable in-vehicle systems, and extensive electric vehicle charging networks aimed at enhancing the driving experience, improving safety, and promoting sustainability. Honda's AI-integrated prototypes promise to redefine vehicles as personal companions, potentially impacting mental health and privacy. In the realm of AI wearables, Based Hardware of San Francisco introduced Omi, an affordable device designed to boost productivity through a brain interface and voice commands. With features emphasizing user privacy and an open-source platform for developers, Omi represents the next step in wearable tech. Grove AI, founded by Stanford engineers, is using their AI agent, Grace, to make clinical trial enrollments more efficient, reducing administrative burdens for patients and healthcare providers alike. Waymo has responded to recent safety incidents involving their autonomous vehicles with significant enhancements to their technology and infrastructure. These improvements aim to address software updates, communication systems, and public safety concerns, ensuring regulatory compliance. Concurrently, security vulnerabilities in Automated License Plate Recognition systems have sparked debates over privacy and the potential misuse of surveillance technologies, highlighting the need for stricter data security measures. Microsoft faced backlash after upgrading its Bing Image Creator with the new DALL-E 3 model, which led to decreased user satisfaction due to image quality and ethical concerns. The company had to revert to the previous model, underscoring the challenges of keeping technical advancements in line with user expectations and the wider implications for market competition and public trust. In parallel, the ARC Prize Foundation, co-founded by François Chollet and Greg Kamradt, seeks to create benchmarks for evaluating AI's journey towards human-level intelligence, driving progress in artificial general intelligence. Small businesses are increasingly adopting generative AI to improve efficiency, counteract labor shortages, and maintain a competitive edge. While data security and accuracy remain challenges, AI is proving transformative across industries, promoting innovation and growth. However, the development of AGI and superintelligence by entities like Open AI presents significant ethical, economic, and geopolitical challenges that must be addressed.
Chapter 34 : IN WHICH PHILEAS FOGG'S NAME IS ONCE MORE AT A PREMIUM ON 'CHANGE. It is time to relate what a change took place in English public opinion when it transpired that the real bankrobber, a certain James Strand, had been arrested, on the 17th day of December, at Edinburgh. Three days before, Phileas Fogg had been a criminal, who was being desperately followed up by the police; now he was an honourable gentleman, mathematically pursuing his eccentric journey round the world. Preview of "In The Beginning" is Audible and Visible after the license of "Around the World in 80 Days" is announced. Cover Art made with "Bing Image Creator" using description of chapter" Music by Oleksii Kaplunskyi from Pixabay(1) Chapter Remains--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mojadrama/message Get full access to #MoJaDrama at mojadrama.substack.com/subscribe
This is the book of the generations of Adam. In the day that God created man, in the likeness of God made he him; Male and female created he them; and blessed them, and called their name Adam, in the day when they were created.And Adam lived an hundred and thirty years, and begat a son in his own likeness, and after his image; and called his name Seth: COVER ART Made by "Bing Image Creator" with Make thee an ark of gopher wood; rooms shalt thou make in the ark, and shalt pitch it within and without with pitch. And this is the fashion which thou shalt make it of: The length of the ark shall be three hundred cubits, the breadth of it fifty cubits, and the height of it thirty cubits. A window shalt thou make to the ark, and in a cubit shalt thou finish it above; and the door of the ark shalt thou set in the side thereof; with lower, second, and third stories shalt thou."In The Beginning" is crafted in Character Form and Made with AugX Labs and has been license and protected by the Project Gutenburg for use of the King James Version. This license is viewable and audible www.gutenberg.orgIf you would like to show your Support, You can do so in 3 ways. Share, Subscribe or Give Sharing is Easy just click Share and Post but do use our hashtag #InTheBeginning .. Subscribe is how you know an episode dropped and notified and finally To Give. Either is appreaciated as our process is unique and therefore can not be rushed, but I assure you next Epsiode is underway.2 Episodes Remain for Season 1--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mojadrama/message Get full access to #MoJaDrama at mojadrama.substack.com/subscribe
Chapter 33 : The dwellers in Saville Row would have been surprised the next day, if they had been told that Phileas Fogg had returned home. His doors and windows were still closed, no appearance of change was visible. Preview of "In The Beginning" is Audible and Visible after the license of "Around the World in 80 Days" is announced.Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/ambient-boy/mindfulness-journeyLicense code: W29JCHRWBXPMDMYWCover Art made with "Bing Image Creator" using first paragraph of Chapter 33. (2) Chapters Remain of Season 1--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mojadrama/message Get full access to #MoJaDrama at mojadrama.substack.com/subscribe
And the LORD God said, "It is not good that the man should be alone; I will make him an help meet for him" Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/ian-aisling/new-futureLicense code: IXFNYRBKWLSQM1BGCOVER ART Made by "Bing Image Creator" with And out of the ground the LORD God formed every beast of the field, and every fowl of the air; and brought them unto Adam to see what he would call them: and whatsoever Adam called every living creature, that was the name thereof. And Adam gave names to all cattle, and to the fowl of the air, and to every beast of the field; but for Adam there was not found an help meet for him. And the LORD God caused a deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and he slept: and he took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof; And the rib, which the LORD God had taken from man, made he a woman, and brought her unto the man. And Adam said,If you would like to show your Support, You can do so in 3 ways. Share, Subscribe or Give Sharing is Easy just click Share and Post but do use our hashtag #InTheBeginning .. Subscribe is how you know an episode dropped and notified and finally To Give. Either is appreaciated as our process is unique and therefore can not be rushed, but I assure you next Epsiode is underway.--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mojadrama/message Get full access to #MoJaDrama at mojadrama.substack.com/subscribe
In the Beginning is a Mojadrama experience of the King James Bible presented in AugXLabs and licensed for use by the Project Gutenberg. Cover Art Made by Title in Bing Image Creator.Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/ambient-boy/mindfulness-journeyLicense code: 8CAAMJCZGOETKS19Revised : Updated mention of River from Python to Pison. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mojadrama/message Get full access to #MoJaDrama at mojadrama.substack.com/subscribe
Chapter 30 : The “China,” in leaving, seemed to have carried off Phileas Fogg's last hope. None of the other steamers were able to serve his projects. Created in Augx Labs, made possible with Project GutenbergLicense has been made Audible and Visible in Description.Cover Art Generated in Bing Image Creator from TitleMusic from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/ilya-kuznetsov/collisionLicense code: VFPIGAWMSUNWXJD8--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mojadrama/message Get full access to #MoJaDrama at mojadrama.substack.com/subscribe
Já testou o Bing Image Creator , a Inteligência artificial da Micrososft para criação de imagens? #bingimagecreator #microsoftcopilot #inteligenciaartificial --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/marynes-freixo-pereira/message
Three passengers including Passepartout had disappeared. Had they been killed in the struggle? Were they taken prisoners by the Sioux? It was impossible to tell. There were many wounded, but none mortally. Written and Performed in AugXLabs made for Spotify music by #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/rahul-popawala/mumbai-rainsLicense code: KJ4YWGZOAYBKIVWXCovert Art Generated in Bing Image Creator matching TitleAudible | Visible License for Project Gutenberg--- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/mojadrama/message Get full access to #MoJaDrama at mojadrama.substack.com/subscribe
Gareth and Ted get together for a *festive* epic as they chat about The Day Before, the Samsung Galaxy Tab A8, ChatGPT, Windows 10 support, Duracell Battery, Logitech Astro, Yamaha CD-C603, Rotor R550X, Murena 2, vivo Y100i, final UX3000 and the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra. With Gareth Myles and Ted Salmon Join us on Mewe RSS Link: https://techaddicts.libsyn.com/rss iTunes | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Tunein | Spotify Amazon | Pocket Casts | Castbox | PodHubUK Feedback, Fallout and Contributions Chad Dixon with his 2021 Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 Review I mostly use a tablet for browsing the internet, maps, light gaming, watching streaming video content and video calls & conferencing. I can report that the A8 is excellent for all of these on its clear and bright 10.5" LCD screen. Audio quality is very good on its four Dolby Atmos speakers. There's no booming bass but it's definitely loud enough when watching music and concert videos and there's a 3.5mm jack. Battery is pretty decent, 7040mAh. I could go a whole week with light use. 64GB I've filled already but there is an SD card slot. My gaming is mostly puzzles so I'm not pushing the graphics capabilities of its Unisoc Tiger T618 (12nm) Octa-core processor. Build quality has proved to be good so far. It's been in a folding case since day one. But even naked, its 508g 6.9 mm thick body feels very sturdy in the hand. The back does warm up a bit during a long video viewing session but no real problem. Overall, I'm very pleased with my purchase and at under £170. I would highly recommend this tablet for everyday use. You're getting a whole lot of tablet for a budget price. Tech Addicts Review ------------------ Xerxes Hodivala on Samsung Store at Kings Cross It's a beautiful space with all their current products on display. I had to get my Fold 4 repaired under warranty. The S-Pen digitiser had failed on each side of the crease. They are going to replace the digitiser, inner screen, metal frame, hinge and both batteries as part of the service. It will basically be a new device when I get it back. The experience was first rate, as good as customer service at an Apple Store. This was actually the reason why I decided on a Samsung rather than a Pixel or OnePlus for my first folding device. I wanted something that I could take to a physical shop for repair if needed. News, Mews and Views China sinks tens of thousands of powerful servers in fresh seawater as it grapples with demand for more power ChatGPT says that asking it to repeat words forever is a violation of its terms The UK could require facial scans or photo IDs to view online porn Windows 10 support doesn't end in 2025 after all, if you pay up Hardline on the hardware This Giant Duracell Battery is an Absolutely Packed Portable Charging Station Astro's latest headset doubles as an HDMI 2.1 switcher Yamaha just unveiled a 5-disc CD changer like it's 2002 Rotor R550X: A full-size autonomous helicopter anyone can buy Phone Zone Murena 2: Switch your privacy on! vivo Y100i brings 50 MP camera and 512 GB storage on the cheap - Blimey! 512GB half-decent mobile phone for £200?! Microsoft Phone Link may soon let you use your Android phone as a webcam Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra gets side-by-side comparison with S23 Ultra, showing subtle differences The Name of the Game Netflix adds three classic Grand Theft Auto games to its growing library Xbox app for PC gets Compact mode for handheld gaming PCs The Last of Us Part 2 Remastered's No Return trailer reveals all the playable characters The Day Before - The day after - The Day Before on SteamE Flap your trap about an App Microsoft launches new Windows App to keep up with the “Chromebook threat” Move over Dolby Atmos, a new rival from Samsung and Google is coming Bing Image Creator from Microsoft Designer Samsung Internet shows up on Microsoft Store, available for Windows PC Google Gallows & Chrome Coroner Google Drive on Android tablets now looks even more like the website An update to Google News magazine support Google Messages for Web readies account-based pairing with an emoji twist Google Drive rolling out new default 'Home' page on the web New Chrome update shows you which sites are slowing down your PC Bargain Basement: Best UK deals and tech on sale we have spotted Nokia X30 5G £299/£249 free buds with some, down from £439 and £399 final UX3000 Bluetooth Wireless Headphones - Hi-Fi Sound Quality - Hybrid Noise Cancelling - Maximum 35 Hours Music Playback - aptX Low Latency - Multipoint Connection - Designed in Japan - £105.00 Was: £119.00 Asus ROG Ally (AMD Ryzen Z1 Extreme model) - £699 to £549 (and 12-months to pay) instax SQUARE SQ6 instant camera, Blush Gold - Now £89.00 RRP: £124.99 UGreen Revodok Pro 313 Docking Station Triple Display, 13-in-1 USB-C Dock with Dual HDMI and DP, 10 Gbps USB-C and USB-A Data Ports, 100W PD, Ethernet, SD/TF, 3.5mm Audio UPERFECT 13.3 Inch Portable Monitor - £93.49 +£30 off discount using link = £63.49 Was: £109.99 Echo Show 5 (3rd Gen, 2023 release) £44.99 (£9 x 5 months too, for me), 3 colours [or £72.98 with the stand]. A good bedside companion for casual viewing/news/data/clock? I've never used Alexa/Amazon Smarts before. You? LG UltraGear Curved Gaming Monitor 49GR85DC - 49 inch, 1440p, 240Hz, 1ms GtG, VA Display, HDR 10, AMD FreeSync compatible, Smart Energy Saving, Displayport, HDMI A freebie? Nero suite for free Main Show URL: http://www.techaddicts.uk | PodHubUK Contact:: gareth@techaddicts.uk | @techaddictsuk Gareth - @garethmyles | Mastodon | garethmyles.com | Gareth's Ko-Fi Ted - tedsalmon.com | Ted's PayPal | Mastodon | Ted's Amazon YouTube: Tech Addicts
Spørsmålet er hentet fra en artikkel i nettmagasinet futurism.com. Der hevdes det at Sam Altman, toppsjefen i Open AI, har antydet at selskapet faktisk er i ferd med å bygge Gud. Er det bare science-fiction eller det noe sannhet i det? KILDER: https://futurism.com/sam-altman-imply-openai-building-god https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2023/09/sam-altman-openai-chatgpt-gpt-4/674764/ MER OM KUNSTIG INTELLIGENS https://digitalnorway.com/kurs/kunstig-intelligens-sprakmodell-og-chatbot-hva-er-chatgpt-og-hvordan-fungerer-det/ https://digitalnorway.com/kurs/hvordan-bruke-generativ-kunstig-intelligens/ https://chat.openai.com/ NB! Episodebildet er laget ved hjelp av kunstig intelligens (Bing Image Creator).
Paul Rosenzweig brings us up to date on the debate over renewing section 702, highlighting the introduction of the first credible “renew and reform” measure by the House Intelligence Committee. I'm hopeful that a similarly responsible bill will come soon from Senate Intelligence and that some version of the two will be adopted. Paul is less sanguine. And we all recognize that the wild card will be House Judiciary, which is drafting a bill that could change the renewal debate dramatically. Jordan Schneider reviews the results of the Xi-Biden meeting in San Francisco and speculates on China's diplomatic strategy in the global debate over AI regulation. No one disagrees that it makes sense for the U.S. and China to talk about the risks of letting AI run nuclear command and control; perhaps more interesting (and puzzling) is China's interest in talking about AI and military drones. Speaking of AI, Paul reports on Sam Altman's defenestration from OpenAI and soft landing at Microsoft. Appropriately, Bing Image Creator provides the artwork for the defenestration but not the soft landing. Nick Weaver covers Meta's not-so-new policy on political ads claiming that past elections were rigged. I cover the flap over TikTok videos promoting Osama Bin Laden's letter justifying the 9/11 attack. Jordan and I discuss reports that Applied Materials is facing a criminal probe over shipments to China's SMIC. Nick reports on the most creative ransomware tactic to date: compromising a corporate network and then filing an SEC complaint when the victim doesn't disclose it within four days. This particular gang may have jumped the gun, he reports, but we'll see more such reports in the future, and the SEC will have to decide whether it wants to foster this business model. I cover the effort to disclose a bitcoin wallet security flaw without helping criminals exploit it. And Paul recommends the week's long read: The Mirai Confession – a detailed and engaging story of the kids who invented Mirai, foisted it on the world, and then worked for the FBI for years, eventually avoiding jail, probably thanks to an FBI agent with a paternal streak. Download 482nd Episode (mp3) You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@gmail.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.
Paul Rosenzweig brings us up to date on the debate over renewing section 702, highlighting the introduction of the first credible “renew and reform” measure by the House Intelligence Committee. I'm hopeful that a similarly responsible bill will come soon from Senate Intelligence and that some version of the two will be adopted. Paul is less sanguine. And we all recognize that the wild card will be House Judiciary, which is drafting a bill that could change the renewal debate dramatically. Jordan Schneider reviews the results of the Xi-Biden meeting in San Francisco and speculates on China's diplomatic strategy in the global debate over AI regulation. No one disagrees that it makes sense for the U.S. and China to talk about the risks of letting AI run nuclear command and control; perhaps more interesting (and puzzling) is China's interest in talking about AI and military drones. Speaking of AI, Paul reports on Sam Altman's defenestration from OpenAI and soft landing at Microsoft. Appropriately, Bing Image Creator provides the artwork for the defenestration but not the soft landing. Nick Weaver covers Meta's not-so-new policy on political ads claiming that past elections were rigged. I cover the flap over TikTok videos promoting Osama Bin Laden's letter justifying the 9/11 attack. Jordan and I discuss reports that Applied Materials is facing a criminal probe over shipments to China's SMIC. Nick reports on the most creative ransomware tactic to date: compromising a corporate network and then filing an SEC complaint when the victim doesn't disclose it within four days. This particular gang may have jumped the gun, he reports, but we'll see more such reports in the future, and the SEC will have to decide whether it wants to foster this business model. I cover the effort to disclose a bitcoin wallet security flaw without helping criminals exploit it. And Paul recommends the week's long read: The Mirai Confession – a detailed and engaging story of the kids who invented Mirai, foisted it on the world, and then worked for the FBI for years, eventually avoiding jail, probably thanks to an FBI agent with a paternal streak. Download 482nd Episode (mp3) You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@gmail.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.
I take advantage of Scott Shapiro's participation in this episode of the Cyberlaw Podcast to interview him about his book, Fancy Bear Goes Phishing – The Dark History of the Information Age, in Five Extraordinary Hacks. It's a remarkable tutorial on cybersecurity, told through stories that you'll probably think you already know until you see what Scott has found by digging into historical and legal records. We cover the Morris worm, the Paris Hilton hack, and the earliest Bulgarian virus writer's nemesis. Along the way, we share views about the refreshing emergence of a well-paid profession largely free of the credentialism that infects so much of the American economy. In keeping with the rest of the episode, I ask Bing Image Creator to generate alternative artwork for the book. In the news roundup, Michael Ellis walks us through the “sweeping”™ White House executive order on artificial intelligence. The tl;dr: the order may or may not actually have real impact on the field. The same can probably be said of the advice now being dispensed by AI's “godfathers.”™ -- the keepers of the flame for AI existential risk who have urged that AI companies devote a third of their R&D budgets to AI safety and security and accept liability for serious harm. Scott and I puzzle over how dangerous AI can be when even the most advanced engines can only do multiplication successfully 85% of the time. Along the way, we evaluate methods for poisoning training data and their utility for helping starving artists get paid when their work is repurposed by AI. Speaking of AI regulation, Nick Weaver offers a real-life example: the California DMV's immediate suspension of Cruise's robotaxi permit after a serious accident that the company handled poorly. Michael tells us what's been happening in the Google antitrust trial, to the extent that anyone can tell, thanks to the heavy confidentiality restrictions imposed by Judge Mehta. One number that escaped -- $26 billion in payments to maintain Google as everyone's default search engine – draws plenty of commentary. Scott and I try to make sense of CISA's claim that its vulnerability list has produced cybersecurity dividends. We are inclined to agree that there's a pony in there somewhere. Nick explains why it's dangerous to try to spy on Kaspersky. The rewards my be big, but so is the risk that your intelligence service will be pantsed. Nick also notes that using Let's Encrypt as part of your man in the middle attack has risks as well – advice he probably should deliver auf Deutsch. Scott and I cover a great Andy Greenberg story about a team of hackers who discovered how to unlock a vast store of bitcoin on an IronKey but may not see a payoff soon. I reveal my connection to the story. Michael and I share thoughts about the effort to renew section 702 of FISA, which lost momentum during the long battle over choosing a Speaker of the House. I note that USTR has surrendered to reality in global digital trade and point out that last week's story about judicial interest in tort cases against social media turned out to be the first robin in what now looks like a remake of The Birds. Download 479th Episode (mp3) You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@gmail.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.
I take advantage of Scott Shapiro's participation in this episode of the Cyberlaw Podcast to interview him about his book, Fancy Bear Goes Phishing – The Dark History of the Information Age, in Five Extraordinary Hacks. It's a remarkable tutorial on cybersecurity, told through stories that you'll probably think you already know until you see what Scott has found by digging into historical and legal records. We cover the Morris worm, the Paris Hilton hack, and the earliest Bulgarian virus writer's nemesis. Along the way, we share views about the refreshing emergence of a well-paid profession largely free of the credentialism that infects so much of the American economy. In keeping with the rest of the episode, I ask Bing Image Creator to generate alternative artwork for the book. In the news roundup, Michael Ellis walks us through the “sweeping”™ White House executive order on artificial intelligence. The tl;dr: the order may or may not actually have real impact on the field. The same can probably be said of the advice now being dispensed by AI's “godfathers.”™ -- the keepers of the flame for AI existential risk who have urged that AI companies devote a third of their R&D budgets to AI safety and security and accept liability for serious harm. Scott and I puzzle over how dangerous AI can be when even the most advanced engines can only do multiplication successfully 85% of the time. Along the way, we evaluate methods for poisoning training data and their utility for helping starving artists get paid when their work is repurposed by AI. Speaking of AI regulation, Nick Weaver offers a real-life example: the California DMV's immediate suspension of Cruise's robotaxi permit after a serious accident that the company handled poorly. Michael tells us what's been happening in the Google antitrust trial, to the extent that anyone can tell, thanks to the heavy confidentiality restrictions imposed by Judge Mehta. One number that escaped -- $26 billion in payments to maintain Google as everyone's default search engine – draws plenty of commentary. Scott and I try to make sense of CISA's claim that its vulnerability list has produced cybersecurity dividends. We are inclined to agree that there's a pony in there somewhere. Nick explains why it's dangerous to try to spy on Kaspersky. The rewards my be big, but so is the risk that your intelligence service will be pantsed. Nick also notes that using Let's Encrypt as part of your man in the middle attack has risks as well – advice he probably should deliver auf Deutsch. Scott and I cover a great Andy Greenberg story about a team of hackers who discovered how to unlock a vast store of bitcoin on an IronKey but may not see a payoff soon. I reveal my connection to the story. Michael and I share thoughts about the effort to renew section 702 of FISA, which lost momentum during the long battle over choosing a Speaker of the House. I note that USTR has surrendered to reality in global digital trade and point out that last week's story about judicial interest in tort cases against social media turned out to be the first robin in what now looks like a remake of The Birds. Download 479th Episode (mp3) You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@gmail.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.
This week's episode is all about AI-generated art. Share your thoughts in the comments below! P.S. Have you signed up for Copy.ai yet? Enjoy the series HERE Episode shout-out to MAKE USE OF, AI Robots, LeBron James in the Upside Down, WokeNFree Episode 242: Are You Using Copy.ai?, Bing Image Creator, Ideogram.ai, Canva AI generation, RoboCup 2023, and Colecteurs Download and use Newsly on www.newsly.me today! Music Intro/Outro: “Thoughts” by Killah Smilez Music Outro: Wanderlust by noxz Make sure you check out the Killah Smilez song on Amazon Catch the music video by Killah Smilez HERE We're always working on new products and ideas, but sometimes it takes a little extra cash to bring them to life. Your financial support for the work we do means the world to us! Donate HERE! ----more---- Shop WokeNFree Designs Create your own Bonfire Shop Today! Get our book HERE Looking for a new video game to play? Check out these recommendations HERE Check out our course on the Law of Attraction HERE Get 10% off Saint Saxon Sound Swag with coupon code: WokeNFree10 Need advice? Connect with Natasha HERE Want to share the episode? Please share the episode on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, Pinterest, TikTok, and Soundcloud Don't forget to subscribe to WokeNFree on iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn, iHeartRadio, and Google Play Do you want to join the show as a guest on an upcoming episode? Contact us HERE Don't forget to submit a scenario to us for SCENARIO TIME! Looking for cool new music to add to your content? Check out Uppbeat today! Making content videos? GetMunch.com! SCENARIO TIME: How would you respond to these scenarios in SCENARIO TIME? Let's chat HERE! Have you reviewed our show yet? Pick your platform of choice HERE Do you want to start a podcast? We are here to HELP! Schedule a FREE strategy session with us HERE This post contains affiliate links. That means if you click on a link and buy something, WokeNFree will earn a small commission from the advertiser at no additional cost to you.
Lo que está cambiando el podcasting y el marketing digital:-Podcastle, estrena IA generativa que elimina el ruido de fondo de las grabaciones.-Edison Research detalla el crecimiento en el tiempo de escucha de pódcast.-Ya comenzó “Oye Dí”, el Festival de Pódcast en Chile.-Microsoft anuncia que el último modelo DALL-E 3 de OpenAI ahora está disponible para todos los usuarios de Bing Chat y Bing Image Creator.-Meta amplía sus funciones de IA generativa para la creación de anuncios.Pódcast recomendadoSonríe al escribir. Un espacio en el que Melina Garrido enseña a sus oyentes a comunicarse naturalmente y a escribir correctamente textos enfocados en sus clientes.Si te gustó esta "newsletter" ¡Suscríbete!Patrocinado por Hindenburg. El Software que usamos para editar nuestro pódcast y Rss.com (compañía de alojamiento de pódcast).
Lo que está cambiando el podcasting y el marketing digital:-Podcastle, estrena IA generativa que elimina el ruido de fondo de las grabaciones.-Edison Research detalla el crecimiento en el tiempo de escucha de pódcast.-Ya comenzó “Oye Dí”, el Festival de Pódcast en Chile.-Microsoft anuncia que el último modelo DALL-E 3 de OpenAI ahora está disponible para todos los usuarios de Bing Chat y Bing Image Creator.-Meta amplía sus funciones de IA generativa para la creación de anuncios.Pódcast recomendadoSonríe al escribir. Un espacio en el que Melina Garrido enseña a sus oyentes a comunicarse naturalmente y a escribir correctamente textos enfocados en sus clientes.Si te gustó esta "newsletter" https://viapodcast.fm/newsletter-via-podcast/Patrocinado por Hindenburg. El Software que https://hindenburg.com/products/y https://dashboard.rss.com/es/auth/sign-up/ (compañía de alojamiento de pódcast).This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/3690946/advertisement
Lo que está cambiando el podcasting y el marketing digital:-Podcastle, estrena IA generativa que elimina el ruido de fondo de las grabaciones.-Edison Research detalla el crecimiento en el tiempo de escucha de pódcast.-Ya comenzó “Oye Dí”, el Festival de Pódcast en Chile.-Microsoft anuncia que el último modelo DALL-E 3 de OpenAI ahora está disponible para todos los usuarios de Bing Chat y Bing Image Creator.-Meta amplía sus funciones de IA generativa para la creación de anuncios.Pódcast recomendadoSonríe al escribir. Un espacio en el que Melina Garrido enseña a sus oyentes a comunicarse naturalmente y a escribir correctamente textos enfocados en sus clientes.Si te gustó esta "newsletter" https://viapodcast.fm/newsletter-via-podcast/Patrocinado por Hindenburg. El Software que https://hindenburg.com/products/y https://dashboard.rss.com/es/auth/sign-up/ (compañía de alojamiento de pódcast).This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4262462/advertisement
On Windows Weekly, Paul Thurrott and Richard Campbell discuss Satya Nadella's admission that Bing's search abilities continue to be worse than Google's, and that the new AI enhancements haven't had the impact he thought they would. Full episode at http://twit.tv/ww849 Hosts: Paul Thurrott, Richard Campbell, and Leo Laporte You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/ Sponsor: GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT
On Windows Weekly, Paul Thurrott and Richard Campbell discuss Satya Nadella's admission that Bing's search abilities continue to be worse than Google's, and that the new AI enhancements haven't had the impact he thought they would. Full episode at http://twit.tv/ww849 Hosts: Paul Thurrott, Richard Campbell, and Leo Laporte You can find more about TWiT and subscribe to our podcasts at https://podcasts.twit.tv/ Sponsor: GO.ACILEARNING.COM/TWIT
Leo, Paul, and Richard talk about the end of free Windows 7/8 to Windows 10/11 upgrades using retail product keys. They also examine Chromebook Plus, Google's new premium Chromebooks aimed at gaming via cloud streaming services. This highlights issues with Google's disjointed strategies after killing Stadia. Plus, insights from the Google antitrust lawsuit, including testimony from Microsoft and Apple executives on partnerships and search dominance. This sparks debate on whether a Bing improvement could ever rival Google. The episode explores concerns around growing subscription costs, ecosystem lock-in, and how technology often complicates rather than eases life today. Windows 11 Microsoft is killing free upgrades from Windows 7 and 8.x And yes, that means those product keys will stop working Windows 11 Insider Preview: Copilot comes to Alt + Tab, more File Explorer fixes Windows 11 Field Guide is getting free updates for 23H2, of course Join the Release Preview channel, you'll (probably) be upgraded to 23H2 and/or (most) new features Windows Backup is already here. But what is it? And what might it become? OneDrive is among the things getting worse in this release. And it's a problem Google announces Chromebook Plus, New Material You design is available now to all AI/Microsoft 365 Satya Nadella admits under oath that AI-powered Bing has not improved its usage share in the slightest Also, Microsoft tried to sell Bing to Apple Apple never seriously considered switching to, let alone buying, Bing Microsoft announces the next generation OneDrive across businesses and consumers Microsoft Lists for consumers comes to mobile, finally Bing Image Creator gets a big DALL-E 3 update. And it is amazing Surface Surface Laptop Studio 2 and Laptop Go 3 are now available Xbox Here are the first Xbox Game Pass titles for October Sony PlayStation CEO Jim Ryan is retiring Layoffs at Epic Tips and Picks Tip of the week: The great ensh*ttification reset App pick of the week: ScanSpeeder RunAs Radio this week: Episode 900! Brown liquor pick of the week: Upshot Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsor: cs.co/twit
Leo, Paul, and Richard talk about the end of free Windows 7/8 to Windows 10/11 upgrades using retail product keys. They also examine Chromebook Plus, Google's new premium Chromebooks aimed at gaming via cloud streaming services. This highlights issues with Google's disjointed strategies after killing Stadia. Plus, insights from the Google antitrust lawsuit, including testimony from Microsoft and Apple executives on partnerships and search dominance. This sparks debate on whether a Bing improvement could ever rival Google. The episode explores concerns around growing subscription costs, ecosystem lock-in, and how technology often complicates rather than eases life today. Windows 11 Microsoft is killing free upgrades from Windows 7 and 8.x And yes, that means those product keys will stop working Windows 11 Insider Preview: Copilot comes to Alt + Tab, more File Explorer fixes Windows 11 Field Guide is getting free updates for 23H2, of course Join the Release Preview channel, you'll (probably) be upgraded to 23H2 and/or (most) new features Windows Backup is already here. But what is it? And what might it become? OneDrive is among the things getting worse in this release. And it's a problem Google announces Chromebook Plus, New Material You design is available now to all AI/Microsoft 365 Satya Nadella admits under oath that AI-powered Bing has not improved its usage share in the slightest Also, Microsoft tried to sell Bing to Apple Apple never seriously considered switching to, let alone buying, Bing Microsoft announces the next generation OneDrive across businesses and consumers Microsoft Lists for consumers comes to mobile, finally Bing Image Creator gets a big DALL-E 3 update. And it is amazing Surface Surface Laptop Studio 2 and Laptop Go 3 are now available Xbox Here are the first Xbox Game Pass titles for October Sony PlayStation CEO Jim Ryan is retiring Layoffs at Epic Tips and Picks Tip of the week: The great ensh*ttification reset App pick of the week: ScanSpeeder RunAs Radio this week: Episode 900! Brown liquor pick of the week: Upshot Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsor: cs.co/twit
Leo, Paul, and Richard talk about the end of free Windows 7/8 to Windows 10/11 upgrades using retail product keys. They also examine Chromebook Plus, Google's new premium Chromebooks aimed at gaming via cloud streaming services. This highlights issues with Google's disjointed strategies after killing Stadia. Plus, insights from the Google antitrust lawsuit, including testimony from Microsoft and Apple executives on partnerships and search dominance. This sparks debate on whether a Bing improvement could ever rival Google. The episode explores concerns around growing subscription costs, ecosystem lock-in, and how technology often complicates rather than eases life today. Windows 11 Microsoft is killing free upgrades from Windows 7 and 8.x And yes, that means those product keys will stop working Windows 11 Insider Preview: Copilot comes to Alt + Tab, more File Explorer fixes Windows 11 Field Guide is getting free updates for 23H2, of course Join the Release Preview channel, you'll (probably) be upgraded to 23H2 and/or (most) new features Windows Backup is already here. But what is it? And what might it become? OneDrive is among the things getting worse in this release. And it's a problem Google announces Chromebook Plus, New Material You design is available now to all AI/Microsoft 365 Satya Nadella admits under oath that AI-powered Bing has not improved its usage share in the slightest Also, Microsoft tried to sell Bing to Apple Apple never seriously considered switching to, let alone buying, Bing Microsoft announces the next generation OneDrive across businesses and consumers Microsoft Lists for consumers comes to mobile, finally Bing Image Creator gets a big DALL-E 3 update. And it is amazing Surface Surface Laptop Studio 2 and Laptop Go 3 are now available Xbox Here are the first Xbox Game Pass titles for October Sony PlayStation CEO Jim Ryan is retiring Layoffs at Epic Tips and Picks Tip of the week: The great ensh*ttification reset App pick of the week: ScanSpeeder RunAs Radio this week: Episode 900! Brown liquor pick of the week: Upshot Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsor: cs.co/twit
Leo, Paul, and Richard talk about the end of free Windows 7/8 to Windows 10/11 upgrades using retail product keys. They also examine Chromebook Plus, Google's new premium Chromebooks aimed at gaming via cloud streaming services. This highlights issues with Google's disjointed strategies after killing Stadia. Plus, insights from the Google antitrust lawsuit, including testimony from Microsoft and Apple executives on partnerships and search dominance. This sparks debate on whether a Bing improvement could ever rival Google. The episode explores concerns around growing subscription costs, ecosystem lock-in, and how technology often complicates rather than eases life today. Windows 11 Microsoft is killing free upgrades from Windows 7 and 8.x And yes, that means those product keys will stop working Windows 11 Insider Preview: Copilot comes to Alt + Tab, more File Explorer fixes Windows 11 Field Guide is getting free updates for 23H2, of course Join the Release Preview channel, you'll (probably) be upgraded to 23H2 and/or (most) new features Windows Backup is already here. But what is it? And what might it become? OneDrive is among the things getting worse in this release. And it's a problem Google announces Chromebook Plus, New Material You design is available now to all AI/Microsoft 365 Satya Nadella admits under oath that AI-powered Bing has not improved its usage share in the slightest Also, Microsoft tried to sell Bing to Apple Apple never seriously considered switching to, let alone buying, Bing Microsoft announces the next generation OneDrive across businesses and consumers Microsoft Lists for consumers comes to mobile, finally Bing Image Creator gets a big DALL-E 3 update. And it is amazing Surface Surface Laptop Studio 2 and Laptop Go 3 are now available Xbox Here are the first Xbox Game Pass titles for October Sony PlayStation CEO Jim Ryan is retiring Layoffs at Epic Tips and Picks Tip of the week: The great ensh*ttification reset App pick of the week: ScanSpeeder RunAs Radio this week: Episode 900! Brown liquor pick of the week: Upshot Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsor: cs.co/twit
Leo, Paul, and Richard talk about the end of free Windows 7/8 to Windows 10/11 upgrades using retail product keys. They also examine Chromebook Plus, Google's new premium Chromebooks aimed at gaming via cloud streaming services. This highlights issues with Google's disjointed strategies after killing Stadia. Plus, insights from the Google antitrust lawsuit, including testimony from Microsoft and Apple executives on partnerships and search dominance. This sparks debate on whether a Bing improvement could ever rival Google. The episode explores concerns around growing subscription costs, ecosystem lock-in, and how technology often complicates rather than eases life today. Windows 11 Microsoft is killing free upgrades from Windows 7 and 8.x And yes, that means those product keys will stop working Windows 11 Insider Preview: Copilot comes to Alt + Tab, more File Explorer fixes Windows 11 Field Guide is getting free updates for 23H2, of course Join the Release Preview channel, you'll (probably) be upgraded to 23H2 and/or (most) new features Windows Backup is already here. But what is it? And what might it become? OneDrive is among the things getting worse in this release. And it's a problem Google announces Chromebook Plus, New Material You design is available now to all AI/Microsoft 365 Satya Nadella admits under oath that AI-powered Bing has not improved its usage share in the slightest Also, Microsoft tried to sell Bing to Apple Apple never seriously considered switching to, let alone buying, Bing Microsoft announces the next generation OneDrive across businesses and consumers Microsoft Lists for consumers comes to mobile, finally Bing Image Creator gets a big DALL-E 3 update. And it is amazing Surface Surface Laptop Studio 2 and Laptop Go 3 are now available Xbox Here are the first Xbox Game Pass titles for October Sony PlayStation CEO Jim Ryan is retiring Layoffs at Epic Tips and Picks Tip of the week: The great ensh*ttification reset App pick of the week: ScanSpeeder RunAs Radio this week: Episode 900! Brown liquor pick of the week: Upshot Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsor: cs.co/twit
How can your organization use generative AI with the right protections in place for your data today? Bing Chat Enterprise delivers built-in commercial data protection that you can use now. If your organization uses Microsoft 365 E3, E5, Business Standard, or Business Premium, you already have access to Bing Chat Enterprise, included as part of those services. Jared Andersen from the Bing Chat Enterprise team at Microsoft explains how it also uses the latest GPT-4 foundation model, included as part of the service. Jared also demonstrates what Bing Chat Enterprise is, along with some of the fundamental differences compared to public services like ChatGPT that you might be familiar with, and how Bing Chat Enterprise protects your data. Then for admins, he also explains your available controls to enable the service for users and options in settings and policies to customize the service. And finally, how Bing Chat Enterprise compares with Microsoft 365 Copilot. ► QUICK LINKS: 00:00 - Can you use GPT-based generative AI with your business data? 00:35 - What is Bing Chat Enterprise? 01:03 - Bing Chat demonstration using up-to-date information 02:05 - Bing Image Creator demonstration using DALL-E 02:37 - How to access Bing Chat Enterprise and bringing protected data into prompts 04:26 - How protections work with Bing Chat Enterprise 05:21 - Admin controls for Bing Chat Enterprise 06:09 - How Bing Chat Enterprise compares with Microsoft 365 Copilot ► Link References: Check out detailed documentation at https://aka.ms/BCEDocs ► Unfamiliar with Microsoft Mechanics? As Microsoft's official video series for IT and tech enthusiasts, you can watch and share valuable content and demos of current and upcoming tech from the people who build it at Microsoft. • Subscribe to our YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/MicrosoftMechanicsSeries • Talk with other IT Pros, join us on the Microsoft Tech Community: https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/microsoft-mechanics-blog/bg-p/MicrosoftMechanicsBlog • Watch or listen from anywhere, subscribe to our podcast: https://microsoftmechanics.libsyn.com/podcast ► Keep getting this insider knowledge, join us on social: • Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/MSFTMechanics • Share knowledge on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/microsoft-mechanics/ • Enjoy us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/msftmechanics/ • Loosen up with us on TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@msftmechanics
With Artificial Intelligence on the rise, are you welcoming the machines in your business, or are you still on the fence?Welcome to the 87th episode of The Growth Booth Podcast, a show focused on supporting budding entrepreneurs and established business owners alike, towards achieving lifestyle freedom through building successful online businesses.In this episode, Aidan is joined by Mark Ling, as they talk about the latest use cases of AI and how it has made their businesses progress into efficient systems and processes, plus a peek into where these AI enthusiasts use this tech in their personal lives.Whether you're looking for step-by-step strategies to start building an online business, simple game plans to grow your business, or proven lifestyle freedom frameworks, you're in the right place.Stay tuned and be sure to join the thousands of listeners already in growth mode!Timestamps:00:00 Intro02:26 Using AI for Growing Businesses07:30 Starting with AI13:44 Developing AI Tools15:19 AI in Video17:00 Episode Sponsor17:41 AI for Scripts21:00 Overuse of AI25:02 Areas of Business Best With AI28:18 AI on a Personal Level36:53 OutroLinks and Resources Mentioned:The Mind Game - https://thegrowthbooth.com/mindgame Stable Diffusion - https://stability.ai/stablediffusion Midjourney - https://www.midjourney.com/ ChatGPT - https://openai.com/chatgpt Bing Image Creator - https://www.bing.com/create About Our Host:Aidan Booth is passionate about lifestyle freedom and has focused on building online businesses to achieve this since 2005. From affiliate marketing to eCommerce, small business marketing to SAAS (software as a service), online education to speaking at seminars, the journey has been a rollercoaster ride with plenty of thrills along the way. Aidan is proud to have helped thousands of entrepreneurs earn their first dollar online, and coached many people to build million-dollar businesses. Aidan and his business partner (Steven Clayton) are the #1 ranked vendors on Clickbank.com, and sell their products in over 100 countries globally, as well as in 20,000+ stores across the USA, to generate 8-figures annually.Away from the online world, Aidan is a proud Dad of two young kids, an avid investor, a swimming enthusiast, and a nomadic traveler. Let's Connect!● Visit the website: https://thegrowthbooth.com/ ● Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aidanboothonline ● Let's connect on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aidanboothonline/ ● Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheGrowthBooth Thanks for tuning in! Please don't forget to like, share, and subscribe!
Episode GuideStar Trek Deep Space Nine The Dominion War Part 2Star Trek NemesisFear The Walking Dead s08ep03 Odessa & ep04 King CountyDoes Psych look like Santa Barbara?Assassin's Creed OriginsBing Image CreatorLinksVideo VersionBlogPodcast Support the show and get early access to upcoming content!Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/headphonesneil-reviews. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/headphonesneil-reviews. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Niche websites are powerful, but AI is here to change the game for the better.Welcome to the 71st episode of The Growth Booth Podcast, a show focused on supporting budding entrepreneurs and established business owners alike, towards achieving lifestyle freedom through building successful online businesses.In this episode, Aidan guides us through 10 steps of making money online through AI-powered niche websites. Learn how AI technology has been improving the way this business model operates, and how you can maximize it to make your own profitable, hand-off online business.Whether you're looking for step-by-step strategies to start building an online business, simple game plans to grow your business, or proven lifestyle freedom frameworks, you're in the right place.Stay tuned and be sure to join the thousands of listeners already in growth mode!Timestamps:00:00 Intro02:41 The Basics of Niche Websites04:59 How To Get Started06:21 Validating a Niche10:19 Episode Sponsor10:47 Choosing A Domain Name12:51 Building The Website14:38 Pillar Content Topics16:42 Content Creation18:24 Images For Articles19:45 Video Content21:05 Monetization24:27 Traffic26:15 Usual Questions27:55 OutroLinks and Resources Mentioned:Float Hosting - https://thegrowthbooth.com/floatSemrush - https://www.semrush.com/Chat GPT - https://openai.com/blog/chatgptGoogle AdSense - https://adsense.google.com/start/Google Trends - https://trends.google.com/trends/Ubersuggest - https://neilpatel.com/ubersuggest/GoDaddy Domain Search - https://www.godaddy.com/domains/bulk-domain-searchWordPress - https://wordpress.com/Canva - https://www.canva.com/Bing Image Creator - https://www.bing.com/create Midjourney - https://www.midjourney.com/ DALL-E - https://openai.com/product/dall-e-2 123RF - https://www.123rf.com/iStock - https://www.istockphoto.com/Pixabay - https://pixabay.com/Speechify - https://speechify.com/Movio - https://movio.co/Amazon Affiliates - https://affiliate-program.amazon.com/SendPad - https://sendpad.com/ Let's Connect!● Visit the website: https://thegrowthbooth.com/ ● Follow us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aidanboothonline ● Let's connect on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aidanboothonline/ ● Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/TheGrowthBooth Thanks for tuning in! Please don't forget to like, share, and subscribe!
We open this episode of the Cyberlaw Podcast with some actual news about the debate over renewing section 702 of FISA. That's the law that allows the government to target foreigners for a national security purpose and to intercept their communications in and out of the U.S. A lot of attention has been focused on what happens to those communications after they've been intercepted and stored, and particularly whether the FBI should get a second court authorization—maybe even a warrant based on probable cause—to search for records about an American. Michael J. Ellis reports that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence has released new data on such FBI searches. Turns out, they've dropped from almost 3 million last year to nearly 120 thousand this year. In large part the drop reflects the tougher restrictions imposed by the FBI on such searches. Those restrictions were also made public this week. It has also emerged that the government is using section 702 millions of times a year to identify the victims of cyberattacks (makes sense: foreign hackers are often a national security concern, and their whole business model is to use U.S. infrastructure to communicate [in a very special way] with U.S. networks.) So it turns out that all those civil libertarians who want to make it hard for the government to search 702 for the names of Americans are proposing ways to slow down and complicate the process of warning hacking victims. Thanks a bunch, folks! Justin Sherman covers China's push to attack and even take over enemy (U.S.) satellites. This story is apparently drawn from the Discord leaks, and it has the ring of truth. I opine that the Defense Department has gotten a little too comfortable waging war against people who don't really have an army, and that the Ukraine conflict shows how much tougher things get when there's an organized military on the other side. (Again, credit for our artwork goes to Bing Image Creator.) Adam Candeub flags the next Supreme Court case to nibble away at the problem of social media and the law. We can look forward to an argument next year about the constitutionality of public officials blocking people who post mean comments on the officials' Facebook pages. Justin and I break down a story about whether Twitter is complying with more government demands under Elon Musk. The short answer is yes. This leads me to ask why we expect social media companies to spend large sums fighting government takedown and surveillance requests when it's much cheaper just to comply. So far, the answer has been that mainstream media and Good People Everywhere will criticize companies that don't fight. But with criticism of Elon Musk's Twitter already turned up to 11, that's not likely to persuade him. Adam and I are impressed by Citizen Labs' report on search censorship in China. We'd both kind of like to see Citizen Lab do the same thing for U.S. censorship, which somehow gets less transparency. If you suspect that's because there's more censorship than U.S. companies want to admit, here's a straw in the wind: Citizen Lab reports that the one American company still providing search services in China, Microsoft Bing, is actually more aggressive about stifling political speech than China's main search engine, Baidu. This fits with my discovery that Bing's Image Creator refused to construct an image using Taiwan's flag. (It was OK using U.S. and German flags, but not China's.) I also credit Microsoft for fixing that particular bit of overreach: You can now create images with both Taiwanese and Chinese flags. Adam covers the EU's enthusiasm for regulating other countries' companies. It has designated 19 tech giants as subject to its online content rules. Of the 19, one is a European company, and two are Chinese (counting TikTok). The rest are American companies. I cover a case that I think could be a big problem for the Biden administration as it ramps up its campaign for cybersecurity regulation. Iowa and a couple of other states are suing to block the Environmental Protection Agency's legally questionable effort to impose cybersecurity requirements on public water systems, using an “interpretation” of a law that doesn't say much about cybersecurity into a law that never had it before. Michael Ellis and I cover the story detailing a former NSA director's business ties to Saudi Arabia—and expand it to confess our unease at the number of generals and admirals moving from command of U.S. forces to a consulting gig with the countries they were just negotiating with. Recent restrictions on the revolving door for intelligence officers gets a mention. Adam covers the Quebec decision awarding $500 thousand to a man who couldn't get Google to consistently delete a false story portraying him as a pedophile and conman. Justin and I debate whether Meta's Reels feature has what it takes to be a plausible TikTok competitor? Justin is skeptical. I'm a little less so. Meta's claims about the success of Reels aren't entirely persuasive, but perhaps it's too early to tell. The D.C. Circuit has killed off the state antitrust case trying to undo Meta's long-ago acquisition of WhatsApp and Instagram. The states waited too long, the court held. That doctrine doesn't apply the same way to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which will get to pursue a lonely battle against long odds for years. If the FTC is going to keep sending its lawyers into battle like conscripts in Bakhmut, I ask, when will the commission start recruiting in Russian prisons? That was fast. Adam tells us that the Brazil court order banning on Telegram because it wouldn't turn over information on neo-Nazi groups has been overturned on appeal. But Telegram isn't out of the woods. The appeal court left in place fines of $200 thousand a day for noncompliance. And in another regulatory walkback, Italy's privacy watchdog is letting ChatGPT back into the country. I suspect the Italian government of cutting a deal to save face as it abandons its initial position on ChatGPT's scraping of public data to train the model. Finally, in policies I wish they would walk back, four U.S. regulatory agencies claimed (plausibly) that they had authority to bring bias claims against companies using AI in a discriminatory fashion. Since I don't see any way to bring those claims without arguing that any deviation from proportional representation constitutes discrimination, this feels like a surreptitious introduction of quotas into several new parts of the economy, just as the Supreme Court seems poised to cast doubt on such quotas in higher education. Download 455th Episode (mp3) You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@gmail.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.
We open this episode of the Cyberlaw Podcast with some actual news about the debate over renewing section 702 of FISA. That's the law that allows the government to target foreigners for a national security purpose and to intercept their communications in and out of the U.S. A lot of attention has been focused on what happens to those communications after they've been intercepted and stored, and particularly whether the FBI should get a second court authorization—maybe even a warrant based on probable cause—to search for records about an American. Michael J. Ellis reports that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence has released new data on such FBI searches. Turns out, they've dropped from almost 3 million last year to nearly 120 thousand this year. In large part the drop reflects the tougher restrictions imposed by the FBI on such searches. Those restrictions were also made public this week. It has also emerged that the government is using section 702 millions of times a year to identify the victims of cyberattacks (makes sense: foreign hackers are often a national security concern, and their whole business model is to use U.S. infrastructure to communicate [in a very special way] with U.S. networks.) So it turns out that all those civil libertarians who want to make it hard for the government to search 702 for the names of Americans are proposing ways to slow down and complicate the process of warning hacking victims. Thanks a bunch, folks! Justin Sherman covers China's push to attack and even take over enemy (U.S.) satellites. This story is apparently drawn from the Discord leaks, and it has the ring of truth. I opine that the Defense Department has gotten a little too comfortable waging war against people who don't really have an army, and that the Ukraine conflict shows how much tougher things get when there's an organized military on the other side. (Again, credit for our artwork goes to Bing Image Creator.) Adam Candeub flags the next Supreme Court case to nibble away at the problem of social media and the law. We can look forward to an argument next year about the constitutionality of public officials blocking people who post mean comments on the officials' Facebook pages. Justin and I break down a story about whether Twitter is complying with more government demands under Elon Musk. The short answer is yes. This leads me to ask why we expect social media companies to spend large sums fighting government takedown and surveillance requests when it's much cheaper just to comply. So far, the answer has been that mainstream media and Good People Everywhere will criticize companies that don't fight. But with criticism of Elon Musk's Twitter already turned up to 11, that's not likely to persuade him. Adam and I are impressed by Citizen Labs' report on search censorship in China. We'd both kind of like to see Citizen Lab do the same thing for U.S. censorship, which somehow gets less transparency. If you suspect that's because there's more censorship than U.S. companies want to admit, here's a straw in the wind: Citizen Lab reports that the one American company still providing search services in China, Microsoft Bing, is actually more aggressive about stifling political speech than China's main search engine, Baidu. This fits with my discovery that Bing's Image Creator refused to construct an image using Taiwan's flag. (It was OK using U.S. and German flags, but not China's.) I also credit Microsoft for fixing that particular bit of overreach: You can now create images with both Taiwanese and Chinese flags. Adam covers the EU's enthusiasm for regulating other countries' companies. It has designated 19 tech giants as subject to its online content rules. Of the 19, one is a European company, and two are Chinese (counting TikTok). The rest are American companies. I cover a case that I think could be a big problem for the Biden administration as it ramps up its campaign for cybersecurity regulation. Iowa and a couple of other states are suing to block the Environmental Protection Agency's legally questionable effort to impose cybersecurity requirements on public water systems, using an “interpretation” of a law that doesn't say much about cybersecurity into a law that never had it before. Michael Ellis and I cover the story detailing a former NSA director's business ties to Saudi Arabia—and expand it to confess our unease at the number of generals and admirals moving from command of U.S. forces to a consulting gig with the countries they were just negotiating with. Recent restrictions on the revolving door for intelligence officers gets a mention. Adam covers the Quebec decision awarding $500 thousand to a man who couldn't get Google to consistently delete a false story portraying him as a pedophile and conman. Justin and I debate whether Meta's Reels feature has what it takes to be a plausible TikTok competitor? Justin is skeptical. I'm a little less so. Meta's claims about the success of Reels aren't entirely persuasive, but perhaps it's too early to tell. The D.C. Circuit has killed off the state antitrust case trying to undo Meta's long-ago acquisition of WhatsApp and Instagram. The states waited too long, the court held. That doctrine doesn't apply the same way to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), which will get to pursue a lonely battle against long odds for years. If the FTC is going to keep sending its lawyers into battle like conscripts in Bakhmut, I ask, when will the commission start recruiting in Russian prisons? That was fast. Adam tells us that the Brazil court order banning on Telegram because it wouldn't turn over information on neo-Nazi groups has been overturned on appeal. But Telegram isn't out of the woods. The appeal court left in place fines of $200 thousand a day for noncompliance. And in another regulatory walkback, Italy's privacy watchdog is letting ChatGPT back into the country. I suspect the Italian government of cutting a deal to save face as it abandons its initial position on ChatGPT's scraping of public data to train the model. Finally, in policies I wish they would walk back, four U.S. regulatory agencies claimed (plausibly) that they had authority to bring bias claims against companies using AI in a discriminatory fashion. Since I don't see any way to bring those claims without arguing that any deviation from proportional representation constitutes discrimination, this feels like a surreptitious introduction of quotas into several new parts of the economy, just as the Supreme Court seems poised to cast doubt on such quotas in higher education. Download 455th Episode (mp3) You can subscribe to The Cyberlaw Podcast using iTunes, Google Play, Spotify, Pocket Casts, or our RSS feed. As always, The Cyberlaw Podcast is open to feedback. Be sure to engage with @stewartbaker on Twitter. Send your questions, comments, and suggestions for topics or interviewees to CyberlawPodcast@gmail.com. Remember: If your suggested guest appears on the show, we will send you a highly coveted Cyberlaw Podcast mug! The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and do not reflect the opinions of their institutions, clients, friends, families, or pets.
第678回 Windows 11とiPhoneの連携が可能に・Windows 10の最終バージョン・Windows 11 Insider Preview情報・Bing Image Creator日本語対応 (2023/4 […]
Depuis l'arrivée de ChatGPT et l'intégration de l'intelligence artificielle d'OpenAI le moteur de recherche Bing de Microsoft, la direction de Google est en état d'alerte. Les équipes du département IA ont été contraintes de sortir le chatbot Bard dans la précipitation, sans avoir le temps de corriger certains soucis majeurs. Aujourd'hui, le New York Times explique que Samsung pourrait remplacer Google par Bing en tant que moteur de recherche par défaut sur ses smartphones. De quoi pousser Google à se lancer corps et âme dans l'amélioration de Bard et donc, de donner une place importante aux IA lors de sa prochaine conférence annuelle mi-mai.Dans le détail, le New York Times rapporte que plus de 160 employés de Google planchent actuellement sur une IA directement intégrée au moteur de recherche. Elle porterait le nom de code « Magi » et reposerait sur le chatbot Bard. Actuellement, les développeurs testeraient de manière assez intensive la qualité des conversations qu'un utilisateur peut avoir avec leur IA. En somme, Magi serait une sorte de hub, de plateforme, dotée de plusieurs modules dont le contenu n'est pas clair à ce jour. L'un de ses modules appelé Gifi permettrait de générer des images à partir de texte via Google Image, comme le fait déjà Microsoft avec Bing Image Creator. Google aurait également connecté son IA à Google Earth et son chatbot pourrait assister l'utilisateur lorsqu'il consulte un site pour organiser un voyage par exemple. Enfin, ce nouvel agent conversationnel pourrait également faire de la programmation.Pour le moment, Google n'a pas annoncé de date de sortie, mais son utilisation sera dans un premier temps limitée à un million de testeurs. Les États-Unis seront les premiers à bénéficier progressivement de l'outil cette année, avant une éventuelle arrivée en Europe courant 2024. Il faut savoir que Google travaille sur les IA depuis de nombreuses années, mais le GAFAM s'était toujours refusé à proposer ses technologies au grand public. L'arrivée spectaculaire de ChatGPT a bouleversé le secteur de la tech, rappelant à Google qu'en la matière, personne n'a le monopole de l'innovation. Or, si Google ne s'est pas pressé pour remplacer son moteur de recherche par un chatbot type ChatGPT, c'est notamment parce qu'il est bien plus difficile d'afficher des contenus publicitaires avec une IA. Aujourd'hui, 80 % des revenus de Google proviennent de sa régie publicitaire. En effet, Microsoft a pu constater qu'afficher des publicités sur son chatbot restait encore un exercice particulièrement délicat et peu compatible avec le principe d'un agent conversationnel. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Depuis l'arrivée de ChatGPT et l'intégration de l'intelligence artificielle d'OpenAI le moteur de recherche Bing de Microsoft, la direction de Google est en état d'alerte. Les équipes du département IA ont été contraintes de sortir le chatbot Bard dans la précipitation, sans avoir le temps de corriger certains soucis majeurs. Aujourd'hui, le New York Times explique que Samsung pourrait remplacer Google par Bing en tant que moteur de recherche par défaut sur ses smartphones. De quoi pousser Google à se lancer corps et âme dans l'amélioration de Bard et donc, de donner une place importante aux IA lors de sa prochaine conférence annuelle mi-mai. Dans le détail, le New York Times rapporte que plus de 160 employés de Google planchent actuellement sur une IA directement intégrée au moteur de recherche. Elle porterait le nom de code « Magi » et reposerait sur le chatbot Bard. Actuellement, les développeurs testeraient de manière assez intensive la qualité des conversations qu'un utilisateur peut avoir avec leur IA. En somme, Magi serait une sorte de hub, de plateforme, dotée de plusieurs modules dont le contenu n'est pas clair à ce jour. L'un de ses modules appelé Gifi permettrait de générer des images à partir de texte via Google Image, comme le fait déjà Microsoft avec Bing Image Creator. Google aurait également connecté son IA à Google Earth et son chatbot pourrait assister l'utilisateur lorsqu'il consulte un site pour organiser un voyage par exemple. Enfin, ce nouvel agent conversationnel pourrait également faire de la programmation. Pour le moment, Google n'a pas annoncé de date de sortie, mais son utilisation sera dans un premier temps limitée à un million de testeurs. Les États-Unis seront les premiers à bénéficier progressivement de l'outil cette année, avant une éventuelle arrivée en Europe courant 2024. Il faut savoir que Google travaille sur les IA depuis de nombreuses années, mais le GAFAM s'était toujours refusé à proposer ses technologies au grand public. L'arrivée spectaculaire de ChatGPT a bouleversé le secteur de la tech, rappelant à Google qu'en la matière, personne n'a le monopole de l'innovation. Or, si Google ne s'est pas pressé pour remplacer son moteur de recherche par un chatbot type ChatGPT, c'est notamment parce qu'il est bien plus difficile d'afficher des contenus publicitaires avec une IA. Aujourd'hui, 80 % des revenus de Google proviennent de sa régie publicitaire. En effet, Microsoft a pu constater qu'afficher des publicités sur son chatbot restait encore un exercice particulièrement délicat et peu compatible avec le principe d'un agent conversationnel. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In questa puntata Roberto e Filippo assieme a Lucio Bragagnolo parlano di Intelligenza Artificiale o quello che viene passato per essere e del futuro dell'assistente vocale di Apple. Note dell'episodio L'elefante nella stanza: Chat GPT Che cos'è? Un motore semantico Una versione agli steroidi del correttore automatico Che riesce a tener traccia delle sue precedenti interazioni È poliglotta: Può parlare e capire più lingue Come funziona sotto la scocca? Sistema statistico Calcola la probabilità che una parola abbia senso vicino ad un'altra Per avere un modello statistico Versione avanzata del correttore automatico di iOS Pensiero umano Conosce attraverso i 5 sensi Informazioni filtrate attraverso Attenzione: Riceviamo ogni secondo un'infinità di informazioni Solo una minima parte arriva alla mente cosciente Quella razionale Percorso di rafforzamento Più un certo collegamento sinaptico viene usato Più la risposta è veloce Più è fissato nella memoria Pensiero della macchina (attualmente) “Conosce” in base ad un mare di informazioni Informazioni che non vengono però filtrate O se vengono Controllo minimo Perché costa tempo e denaro Link utili / interessanti Ehi siri fammi parlare con ChatGPT (https://apple.quora.com/Ehi-Siri-fammi-parlare-con-ChatGPT) Versione originale in inglese (https://github.com/Yue-Yang/ChatGPT-Siri) Letture Riassumere video con ChatGPT (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RYZo9pi1Yzo) Stephen Wolfram Risponde Alle Domande In Diretta Su ChatGPT (https://youtu.be/zLnhg9kir3Q) Come viene addestrato ChatGPT (https://youtu.be/VPRSBzXzavo) Ma come Funziona Effettivamente ChatGPT? (https://youtu.be/aQguO9IeQWE) Il problema più grande con l'IA! (https://youtu.be/7emz4zZ226E) Ho provato a usare l'intelligenza artificiale. Mi ha spaventato. (https://youtu.be/jPhJbKBuNnA) Schemi ed analogie (https://macintelligence.org/posts/2023-03-23-schemi-e-analogie/) Machine learning ricerche ad Apple (https://machinelearning.apple.com/) ML di Apple Live Text CoreML Live Captions o sottotitoli live Idee di Bill Gates (https://www.gatesnotes.com/The-Age-of-AI-Has-Begun) Espunti interessanti estratti dall'articolo e tradotti (con il traduttore di Apple): Alla fine il tuo modo principale di controllare un computer non sarà più puntare e fare clic o toccare menu e finestre di dialogo. Invece, sarai in grado di scrivere una richiesta in inglese semplice. (E non solo l'inglese: le AI capiranno le lingue di tutto il mondo. In India all'inizio di quest'anno, ho incontrato sviluppatori che stanno lavorando su IA che capiranno molte delle lingue parlate lì.) Inoltre, i progressi nell'IA consentiranno la creazione di un agente personale. Pensalo come un assistente personale digitale: vedrà le tue ultime e-mail, saprà delle riunioni a cui partecipi, leggerà ciò che leggi e leggerà le cose di cui non vuoi preoccuparti. Questo migliorerà il tuo lavoro sui compiti che vuoi fare e ti libererà da quelli che non vuoi fare. Problemi con IA Quando chiedi a un'IA di inventare qualcosa di fittizio, può farlo bene. Ma quando chiedi consigli su un viaggio che vuoi fare, potrebbe suggerire hotel che non esistono. Questo perché l'IA non capisce abbastanza bene il contesto della tua richiesta da sapere se dovrebbe inventare hotel falsi o parlarti solo di quelli reali che hanno camere disponibili. Le IA superintelligenti sono nel nostro futuro. Rispetto a un computer, il nostro cervello opera a ritmo di lumaca: un segnale elettrico nel cervello si muove a 1/100.000 la velocità del segnale in un chip di silicio! Una volta che gli sviluppatori possono generalizzare un algoritmo di apprendimento ed eseguirlo alla velocità di un computer - un risultato che potrebbe essere a un decennio o un secolo di distanza - avremo un AGI incredibilmente potente. Sarà in grado di fare tutto ciò che un cervello umano può, ma senza alcun limite pratico alla dimensione della sua memoria o alla velocità con cui opera. Questo sarà un cambiamento profondo. L'intelligenza artificiale non controlla ancora il mondo fisico e non può stabilire i propri obiettivi [NdR FS non del tutto vero] Libri consigli da gates: - Superintelligence, by Nick Bostrom; - Life 3.0 by Max Tegmark; and - A Thousand Brains, by Jeff Hawkins (https://www.gatesnotes.com/A-Thousand-Brains). Modi di essere. Animali, piante e computer: al di là dell'intelligenza umana (https://amzn.to/3nzdfMB) di James Bridle Alcuni spunti interessanti estratti dal libro: Voglio suggerire tre principi che dovrebbero guidare quella conversazione. In primo luogo, dovremmo cercare di bilanciare le paure sugli aspetti negativi dell'IA, che sono comprensibili e validi, con la sua capacità di migliorare la vita delle persone. Per sfruttare al meglio questa straordinaria nuova tecnologia, dovremo proteggerci dai rischi e diffondere i benefici al maggior numero possibile di persone. In secondo luogo, le forze di mercato non produrranno naturalmente prodotti e servizi di intelligenza artificiale che aiutano i più poveri. È più probabile il contrario. Con finanziamenti affidabili e le giuste politiche, i governi e la filantropia possono garantire che le IA vengano utilizzate per ridurre l'iniquità. Proprio come il mondo ha bisogno delle sue persone più brillanti focalizzate sui suoi più grandi problemi, dovremo concentrare le migliori IA del mondo sui suoi più grandi problemi. Anche se non dovremmo aspettare che questo accada, è interessante pensare se l'intelligenza artificiale identificherebbe mai l'iniquità e cercherebbe di ridurla. Hai bisogno di avere un senso della moralità per vedere l'iniquità, o lo vedrebbe anche un'IA puramente razionale? Se riconoscesse l'iniquità, cosa suggerirebbe di fare al riguardo? Infine, dovremmo tenere a mente che siamo solo all'inizio di ciò che l'IA può realizzare. Qualunque limite abbia oggi sarà sparito prima che ce ne accorgiamo. IA competitiva L'attuale forma dominante di intelligenza artificiale, quella di cui tutti parlano, non è né creativa né collaborativa né fantasiosa. O è totalmente asservita - stupida, francamente - o è oppositiva, aggressiva e pericolosa (e forse sempre stupida). E analisi dei modelli, descrizione di immagini, riconoscimento facciale e gestione del traffico; è prospezione petrolifera, arbitraggio finanziario, sistemi di armi autonome e programmi scacchistici che distruggono completamente l'avversario umano. Compiti competitivi, profitti competitivi, intelligenza competitiva. In tutto questo, l'IA competitiva ha una caratteristica in comune con il mondo naturale, o meglio con l'errata concezione storica che abbiamo di quest'ultimo. Essa immagina un ambiente sanguinario in cui l'umanità nuda e fragile deve combattere con forze devastanti e soggiogarle, piegandole alla sua volontà (di solito, maschile) sotto forma di agricoltura, architettura, allevamento e addomesticamento. Questo modo di vedere il mondo ha prodotto un sistema di classificazione a tre livelli in base ai tipi di animali in cui ci imbattiamo: animali domestici, bestiame e fiere selvatiche, ciascuno con i suoi attributi e atteggiamenti. Trasferendo questa analogia al mondo dell'IA, sembra evidente che finora abbiamo creato perlopiù macchine addomesticate del primo tipo, iniziando a recintare un allevamento del secondo e vivendo nel timore di scatenare il terzo. Ecologia della tecnologia Dobbiamo imparare a convivere con il mondo, anziché cercare di dominarlo. In breve, dobbiamo scoprire un'ecologia della tecnologia. Il termine «ecologia» fu coniato alla metà del XIX secolo dal naturalista tedesco [[Ernst Haeckel]] nel libro Generelle Morphologie der Organismen («Morfologia generale degli organismi»). «Per ecologia,» scrive «intendiamo la totalità delle scienze delle relazioni dell'organismo con l'ambiente, incluse tutte le condizioni dell'esistenza nella loro accezione più ampia.» Il termine deriva dal greco oikos (oikos), che significa casa o ambiente; in una nota, Haeckel fa riferimento anche al greco xwpa (chora), cioè «luogo di residenza». L'ecologia non è semplicemente lo studio del posto in cui ci troviamo, ma di tutto ciò che ci circonda e che ci permette di vivere. John Muir, amante della vita all'aria aperta e padre del sistema dei parchi nazionali negli Stati Uniti. Riflettendo sull'abbondanza di vita complessa in cui si imbatté mentre scriveva il libro La mia prima estate sulla Sierra, afferma semplicemente: «Se cerchiamo di isolare un oggetto qualsiasi, scopriamo che ogni cosa è ancorata a tutto il resto dell'universo». La tecnologia è l'ultimo campo del sapere a scoprire la propria ecologia. Quest'ultima è lo studio del luogo in cui ci troviamo e delle relazioni tra i suoi abitanti, mentre la tecnologia è lo studio di ciò che facciamo in quel posto: Téxv (techne), ossia arte o mestiere. Se la mettiamo così, le due sembrano alleate per natura, ma la storia della tecnologia è perlopiù un racconto di cecità intenzionale nei confronti del contesto e delle conseguenze della sua attuazione. AI user friendly Molti di coloro che si occupano direttamente di IA presso Facebook, Google e altre aziende della Silicon Valley sono più che consapevoli delle potenziali minacce esistenziali della superintelligenza. Come abbiamo visto, alcuni dei protagonisti del settore tecnologico - da Bill Gates ed Elon Musk a Shane Legg, il fondatore della DeepMind di Google - hanno espresso preoccupazione per la sua comparsa. Ma la loro risposta è di tipo tecnologico: dobbiamo progettare l'IA in modo che sia friendly, incorporando nella sua programmazione le tutele e le procedure necessarie per garantire che non diventi mai una minaccia per la vita e per il benessere dell'uomo. Questo approccio sembra insieme ottimistico ai limiti dell'assurdo e ingenuo in misura preoccupante. È anche in contrasto con l'esperienza che abbiamo accumulato finora con i sistemi intelligenti. Nella storia dell'IA, i modelli di intelligenza che cercano di descrivere una mente completa attraverso un insieme di regole prestabilite non sono mai riusciti a raggiungere i loro obiettivi. L'azione giusta, in altre parole, non dipende dalla preesistenza della conoscenza giusta - una mappa delle strade o una gerarchia delle virtù - ma dal contesto, dalla sollecitudine e dalla cura. Una macchina preprogrammata per essere friendly non ha meno probabilità di investirvi, o di trasformarvi in graffette, di un'altra predisposta al commercio, se i suoi calcoli la considerano l'azione più etica in quelle circostanze. AI News Roundup: Alpaca, BritGPT, AI di Stanford in Gdocs & Sheets - le IA SaaS sono obsolete? (https://www.reddit.com/r/EntrepreneurRideAlong/comments/11yfl3i/ai_news_roundup_stanfords_alpaca_britgpt_ai_in/) Estratto della sintesi tradotto in italiano (traduzione servizio di Apple) L'alpaca di Stanford I ricercatori di Stanford hanno svelato un modello di intelligenza artificiale (AI) che si comporta quasi alla pari con ChatGPT, ma è costato loro solo 600 dollari per allenarsi. Alpaca è una variante di sette miliardi di parametri dell'LLaMA di Meta. È stato messo a punto utilizzando 52.000 istruzioni generate da GPT-3.5 (ChatGPT). (Proprio come il modo in cui i tester umani sono stati utilizzati per mettere a punto ChatGPT, Stanford ha usato il modello dietro ChatGPT per addestrare la loro Alpaca AI.) Nei test, Alpaca ha funzionato in modo paragonabile al modello di OpenAI, ma ha prodotto più allucinazioni. L'alpaca è significativo perché ha dimostrato che costruire e addestrare nuovi modelli di intelligenza artificiale può essere follemente economico. Questo potrebbe potenzialmente consentire a più persone, compresi i cattivi attori, di creare nuovi modelli economici. Mostra anche che una volta reso pubblico il tuo modello, anche senza rivelare il suo codice, può essere usato per costruire modelli migliori dai concorrenti (come usare ChatGPT per istruire Alpaca durante l'allenamento). Questo potrebbe rendere aziende come OpenAI, Google e Microsoft ancora più aggressive nel proteggere la loro tecnologia proprietaria? Sul lato positivo, il futuro in cui sarai in grado di allenare la tua IA ChatGPT-like usando il tuo computer si è appena avvicinato. AI in Google Workspace e Microsoft 365 Entrambe le società hanno indicato che l'IA sarà fortemente incorporata nelle loro app. Google ha mostrato immagini della loro intelligenza artificiale utilizzate in Gdocs per scrivere articoli completi, in fogli per scrivere formule e in diapositive per generare presentazioni complete con testo e immagini generate dall'IA. La demo di Microsoft era migliore. Hanno mostrato i loro strumenti di intelligenza artificiale dal vivo in azione. La loro Copilot AI sarà disponibile in app come Word, Presentation, Excel, ecc. e sarà in grado di aggregare i dati su qualsiasi argomento in queste app per rispondere a domande, pianificare riunioni, generare risposte, ecc. Copilot sarà anche in grado di prendere appunti dal vivo nelle riunioni e ricapitolare la discussione fatta finora. Anche se questo significa un enorme aumento della nostra produttività, significa anche la morte di molte aziende SaaS costruite attorno alla fornitura di funzionalità basate su GPT in queste app. Anche strumenti come Jasper potrebbero essere resi obsoleti. Rilascio limitato di Bard Google ha iniziato a lanciare il suo chatbot AI Bard, ma è disponibile solo per alcuni utenti negli Stati Uniti e nel Regno Unito e devono avere più di 18 anni. La risposta iniziale a Bard è stata tiepida con gli utenti che si lamentano che è molto inferiore a Bing Chat. Dimostra meno creatività ed è incline a più errori matematici. In effetti, un pulsante per "Google It" appare dopo ogni risposta del bot, come un indicatore della propria insicurezza. È apparentemente più veloce di Bing, ma questo è probabilmente dovuto a un modello più piccolo. Un modello più piccolo spiegherebbe anche le sue scarse prestazioni. OpenAI svela GPT-4 GPT-4 è multimodale, il che significa che accetta sia input di testo che di immagini. È meglio e più sicuro di ChatGPT. Alcune delle sue abilità: - GPT-4 può comprendere i mockup disegnati a mano e convertirli in codice del sito web funzionante. - Può analizzare documenti complessi come i codici fiscali, ma anche eseguire una matematica accurata oltre a citare leggi e principi appropriati per calcolare le tasse. - GPT-4 supera anche GPT 3.5 negli esami umani come Bar, SAT e GRE (punteggi nel 90° percentile rispetto al 10° percentile di ChatGPT) e ha una memoria contestuale molto più lunga. - È disponibile solo nell'abbonamento a pagamento ChatGPT Plus e tramite una lista d'attesa API. Bing chat ha anche utilizzato una prima versione di GPT-4 nelle ultime 5 settimane. Sono curioso dei risultati che potremmo ottenere se Alpaca fosse addestrato usando un modello LLama più grande e messo a punto con GPT-4. Inizia la corsa globale all'IA Il governo del Regno Unito sta investendo 900 milioni di sterline nel supercomputer come parte di una strategia di intelligenza artificiale che include la garanzia che il paese possa costruire il proprio "BritGPT". L'obiettivo è contrastare l'influenza dell'IA della Cina e garantire che il Regno Unito rimanga competitivo nel campo dell'IA. PaLM e Makersuite di Google Google Cloud ha annunciato che le sue applicazioni basate sull'intelligenza artificiale (AI), come l'API Pathways Language Model (PaLM) per i modelli linguistici e lo strumento di prototipazione Makersuite, sono ora disponibili per gli sviluppatori. Google Makersuite è un ambiente di prototipazione per testare e migliorare le idee per le applicazioni di intelligenza artificiale generativa. È un'app che aumenta l'API PaLM con modi per progettare prompt, produrre dati sintetici e personalizzare la messa a punto di un modello. Con MakerSuite, gli sviluppatori possono iterare sui prompt, aumentare il loro set di dati con dati sintetici e sintonizzare facilmente modelli personalizzati. Ernie di Baidu Ernie è un modello di deep-learning di elaborazione del linguaggio naturale (NLP) sviluppato da Baidu, una multinazionale tecnologica cinese. Il modello contiene parametri 10B e ha raggiunto un nuovo punteggio all'avanguardia sul benchmark SuperGLUE, superando il punteggio di base umano. È probabile che Ernie goda di un significativo vantaggio di mercato sul suo territorio d'origine rispetto ai prodotti fabbricati negli Stati Uniti, a causa sia della spinta della Cina per l'autosufficienza tecnologica che della rigorosa censura di Internet del paese. Tuttavia, la sua demo è stata una presentazione poco brillante con risposte pre-registrate. L'incursione di Apple nei LLM Si dice che Apple stia sviluppando un'IA per rivaleggiare con ChatGPT. Il rapporto del New York Times afferma che Apple ha recentemente condotto un evento interno incentrato sui contenuti di intelligenza artificiale generativa e sui grandi modelli linguistici (LLM), che sono le reti neurali che alimentano i chatbot come ChatGPT. Apple ha un'enorme riserva di cassa e con il loro track record AlexaTM di Amazon Il modello AlexaTM 20B di Amazon è stato recentemente nelle notizie. È un modello di linguaggio sequence-to-sequence (seq2seq) da 20 miliardi di parametri che presenta prestazioni all'avanguardia. Il modello è ora disponibile per uso non commerciale per aiutare lo sviluppo e la valutazione di modelli linguistici di grandi dimensioni multilingue (LLM). Il modello è disponibile anche in Amazon SageMaker JumpStart, l'hub di apprendimento automatico di SageMaker. E ha mostrato prestazioni competitive su compiti e benchmark NLP comuni (SuperGLUE e XNLI). Midjourney rilascia la V5 Midjourney v5 porta con sé "efficienza, coerenza e qualità" migliorate, ha detto Midjourney sul suo sito web. La V5 ora risponde con una "range stilistica molto più ampia" rispetto alla versione 4, pur essendo anche più sensibile ai suggerimenti, generando meno testo indesiderato e offrendo un aumento di 2 volte della risoluzione dell'immagine. Midjourney v5 può generare abbastanza bene mani umane realistiche, il che era un problema con le versioni precedenti. Ha anche generato ritratti credibili di esseri umani e persone in pose naturali. Allontanerà opportunità ai piccoli modelli e ai grafici? Bing AI Image Creator di Microsoft Microsoft ha dato al suo generatore di immagini AI il proprio sito Bing Create dedicato. Bing Image Creator è alimentato da una versione avanzata del modello DALL-E di OpenAI e funziona sorprendentemente bene anche con input di linguaggio naturale. Le immagini sono libere di creare e più sei descrittivo, migliore è l'output che ottieni. Sono particolarmente entusiasta dell'uso della generazione di immagini AI nella narrazione. C'è il potenziale per nuove startup di genere in questo spazio che utilizzano storie generate dall'IA e le combinano con immagini di intelligenza artificiale e voci fuori campo di intelligenza artificiale per esperienze di narrazione realistiche e personalizzate. Dove ci potete trovare? Lucio: Lucio (https://macintelligence.org/) Roberto: Mac e architettura: mach - dot - net.wordpress.com (https://marchdotnet.wordpress.com/) Podcast settimanale Snap - architettura imperfetta (https://www.spreaker.com/show/snap-archiettura-imperfetta) Filippo: Avvocati e Mac punto it (https://www.avvocati-e-mac.it/) Ci sentiamo tra 2 settimane.
KB5025239, Build 2023 session catalog, Xbox April update Microsoft brings more new features to Windows 11 on Patch Tuesday. It's a mini moment! Windows 11 is coming to HoloLens 2! The platform is saved! (Oops) IDC says that PC shipments tanked 29 percent in Q1. Don't worry, the Mac did even worse. And you won't believe how the Apple community is rationalizing THAT bit of news Windows 365 gets a Frontline worker option and a smart TV app Microsoft Build is coming Microsoft has posted the session catalog! Anything stand out? Yep. Windows: How we integrated WinUI 3 into File Explorer, Q&A; The Old New Thing with Raymond Chen, Q&A; Deliver AI-powered experiences across cloud and edge, with Windows; Learn how to build the best Arm apps for Windows; Optimize your apps for Arm .NET: Full stack Blazor in .NET 8 with Blazor United; What's new in .NET Multi-platform App UI (MAUI), Q&A The era of the AI Copilot with Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott Fluent 2: It must be based on the work in Loop Microsoft 365 Microsoft 365 Copilot is coming soon to OneNote Microsoft Edge gets three new features, including DALL-E-based image creation The case of the mysterious reappearing Quick Access Toolbar (QAT) in Office. A tale of ribbons, simplified ribbons, and personalized toolbars, oh my LinkedIn adds free ways to verify yourself on the service - there better be a blue checkmark! Microsoft brings Bing chatbot to Swiftkey on Android Xbox Xbox Game Pass exits beta, is now available in 40 new countries Xbox April Update adds revamped search, ability to adjust active hours - a nice compromise on energy savings Microsoft drops the hammer on Xbox game emulation Microsoft brings more Elite Controller 2 customizations to Xbox Design Lab Microsoft announces another 10-year cloud gaming deal with a company not named Sony Tips & Picks Tip of the week: Learn to code for free App pick of the week: Opera's free VPN This Week on RunAs: Team Metrics with Angela Dugan Brown liquor pick of the week: The Famous Grouse Hosts: Paul Thurrott, Richard Campbell, and Mikah Sargent Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsor: meraki.cisco.com/twit
KB5025239, Build 2023 session catalog, Xbox April update Microsoft brings more new features to Windows 11 on Patch Tuesday. It's a mini moment! Windows 11 is coming to HoloLens 2! The platform is saved! (Oops) IDC says that PC shipments tanked 29 percent in Q1. Don't worry, the Mac did even worse. And you won't believe how the Apple community is rationalizing THAT bit of news Windows 365 gets a Frontline worker option and a smart TV app Microsoft Build is coming Microsoft has posted the session catalog! Anything stand out? Yep. Windows: How we integrated WinUI 3 into File Explorer, Q&A; The Old New Thing with Raymond Chen, Q&A; Deliver AI-powered experiences across cloud and edge, with Windows; Learn how to build the best Arm apps for Windows; Optimize your apps for Arm .NET: Full stack Blazor in .NET 8 with Blazor United; What's new in .NET Multi-platform App UI (MAUI), Q&A The era of the AI Copilot with Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott Fluent 2: It must be based on the work in Loop Microsoft 365 Microsoft 365 Copilot is coming soon to OneNote Microsoft Edge gets three new features, including DALL-E-based image creation The case of the mysterious reappearing Quick Access Toolbar (QAT) in Office. A tale of ribbons, simplified ribbons, and personalized toolbars, oh my LinkedIn adds free ways to verify yourself on the service - there better be a blue checkmark! Microsoft brings Bing chatbot to Swiftkey on Android Xbox Xbox Game Pass exits beta, is now available in 40 new countries Xbox April Update adds revamped search, ability to adjust active hours - a nice compromise on energy savings Microsoft drops the hammer on Xbox game emulation Microsoft brings more Elite Controller 2 customizations to Xbox Design Lab Microsoft announces another 10-year cloud gaming deal with a company not named Sony Tips & Picks Tip of the week: Learn to code for free App pick of the week: Opera's free VPN This Week on RunAs: Team Metrics with Angela Dugan Brown liquor pick of the week: The Famous Grouse Hosts: Paul Thurrott, Richard Campbell, and Mikah Sargent Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsor: meraki.cisco.com/twit
KB5025239, Build 2023 session catalog, Xbox April update Microsoft brings more new features to Windows 11 on Patch Tuesday. It's a mini moment! Windows 11 is coming to HoloLens 2! The platform is saved! (Oops) IDC says that PC shipments tanked 29 percent in Q1. Don't worry, the Mac did even worse. And you won't believe how the Apple community is rationalizing THAT bit of news Windows 365 gets a Frontline worker option and a smart TV app Microsoft Build is coming Microsoft has posted the session catalog! Anything stand out? Yep. Windows: How we integrated WinUI 3 into File Explorer, Q&A; The Old New Thing with Raymond Chen, Q&A; Deliver AI-powered experiences across cloud and edge, with Windows; Learn how to build the best Arm apps for Windows; Optimize your apps for Arm .NET: Full stack Blazor in .NET 8 with Blazor United; What's new in .NET Multi-platform App UI (MAUI), Q&A The era of the AI Copilot with Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott Fluent 2: It must be based on the work in Loop Microsoft 365 Microsoft 365 Copilot is coming soon to OneNote Microsoft Edge gets three new features, including DALL-E-based image creation The case of the mysterious reappearing Quick Access Toolbar (QAT) in Office. A tale of ribbons, simplified ribbons, and personalized toolbars, oh my LinkedIn adds free ways to verify yourself on the service - there better be a blue checkmark! Microsoft brings Bing chatbot to Swiftkey on Android Xbox Xbox Game Pass exits beta, is now available in 40 new countries Xbox April Update adds revamped search, ability to adjust active hours - a nice compromise on energy savings Microsoft drops the hammer on Xbox game emulation Microsoft brings more Elite Controller 2 customizations to Xbox Design Lab Microsoft announces another 10-year cloud gaming deal with a company not named Sony Tips & Picks Tip of the week: Learn to code for free App pick of the week: Opera's free VPN This Week on RunAs: Team Metrics with Angela Dugan Brown liquor pick of the week: The Famous Grouse Hosts: Paul Thurrott, Richard Campbell, and Mikah Sargent Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsor: meraki.cisco.com/twit
KB5025239, Build 2023 session catalog, Xbox April update Microsoft brings more new features to Windows 11 on Patch Tuesday. It's a mini moment! Windows 11 is coming to HoloLens 2! The platform is saved! (Oops) IDC says that PC shipments tanked 29 percent in Q1. Don't worry, the Mac did even worse. And you won't believe how the Apple community is rationalizing THAT bit of news Windows 365 gets a Frontline worker option and a smart TV app Microsoft Build is coming Microsoft has posted the session catalog! Anything stand out? Yep. Windows: How we integrated WinUI 3 into File Explorer, Q&A; The Old New Thing with Raymond Chen, Q&A; Deliver AI-powered experiences across cloud and edge, with Windows; Learn how to build the best Arm apps for Windows; Optimize your apps for Arm .NET: Full stack Blazor in .NET 8 with Blazor United; What's new in .NET Multi-platform App UI (MAUI), Q&A The era of the AI Copilot with Microsoft CTO Kevin Scott Fluent 2: It must be based on the work in Loop Microsoft 365 Microsoft 365 Copilot is coming soon to OneNote Microsoft Edge gets three new features, including DALL-E-based image creation The case of the mysterious reappearing Quick Access Toolbar (QAT) in Office. A tale of ribbons, simplified ribbons, and personalized toolbars, oh my LinkedIn adds free ways to verify yourself on the service - there better be a blue checkmark! Microsoft brings Bing chatbot to Swiftkey on Android Xbox Xbox Game Pass exits beta, is now available in 40 new countries Xbox April Update adds revamped search, ability to adjust active hours - a nice compromise on energy savings Microsoft drops the hammer on Xbox game emulation Microsoft brings more Elite Controller 2 customizations to Xbox Design Lab Microsoft announces another 10-year cloud gaming deal with a company not named Sony Tips & Picks Tip of the week: Learn to code for free App pick of the week: Opera's free VPN This Week on RunAs: Team Metrics with Angela Dugan Brown liquor pick of the week: The Famous Grouse Hosts: Paul Thurrott, Richard Campbell, and Mikah Sargent Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsor: meraki.cisco.com/twit
Stilinga striuke apsirengęs Popiežius ir policininkų suimamas Donaldas Trumpas privertė pakalbėti apie naująją paveikslėlius generuojančio Midjourney v5. Paveikslėlių generavime naujo ir daugiau: Adobe Firefly įrankiai profesionalams, Bing Image Creator norintiems čia ir dabar. Su video generavimu viskas sudėtingiau – nors lietuvio Eimanto Balčiūno sukurtas video plačiai išpopuliarėjo, pagaliau paleistas daug žadėjęs Runway Gen-1, antakiai šioje srityje taip aukštai nekyla. O be to – ChatGPT kuriami įvairūs plėtiniai, tad pokalbių robotą išvysime vis įvaresnėse rolėse.
第673回 AIで画像生成 Bing Image Creator/Stable Diffusion Web UI (2023/3/26) Teamsの番組コミュニティのお申込みはこちら Surface Pro 9実機レポ […]
Leading global tech analysts Patrick Moorhead (Moor Insights & Strategy) and Daniel Newman (Futurum Research) are front and center on The Six Five analyzing the tech industry's biggest news each and every week and also conducting interviews with tech industry "insiders" on a regular basis. The Six Five represents six (6) handpicked topics that will be covered for five (5) minutes each. Welcome to this week's edition of “The 6-5.” I'm Patrick Moorhead with Moor Insights & Strategy, co-host, joined by Daniel Newman with Futurum Research. On this week's show we will be talking: NVIDIA GTC https://twitter.com/PatrickMoorhead/status/1638582414669750285?s=20 https://twitter.com/StreetSignsCNBC/status/1638383041084108800?s=20 https://twitter.com/PatrickMoorhead/status/1638232261249081367?s=20 NVIDIA to Bring AI to Every Industry, CEO Says https://twitter.com/danielnewmanUV/status/1638598747218403328?s=20 https://twitter.com/danielnewmanUV/status/1638597733958422528?s=20 SAP Datasphere https://news.sap.com/2023/03/sap-datasphere-power-of-business-data/ https://www.techtarget.com/searchsap/news/365532200/New-SAP-Datasphere-looks-to-build-a-business-data-fabric Intel Org Changes https://twitter.com/PatrickMoorhead/status/1638568480717807618?s=20 https://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/newsroom/news/ifs-march-2023-news.html? https://twitter.com/PGelsinger/status/1638234519647174657?s=20 Bing Image Creator https://twitter.com/PatrickMoorhead/status/1638909588761133060?s=20 https://blogs.microsoft.com/blog/2023/03/21/create-images-with-your-words-bing-image-creator-comes-to-the-new-bing/ https://www.bing.com/create HPE Acquires OpsRamp https://www.hpe.com/us/en/newsroom/press-release/2023/03/hewlett-packard-enterprise-to-acquire-opsramp-advancing-hybrid-cloud-leadership-and-expanding-hpe-greenlake-into-it-operations-management.html https://futurumresearch.com/research-notes/hpe-acquires-opsramp-to-ramp-up-hpe-greenlake-itom-capabilities/ UK Concerned with Broadcom-VMWare Deal https://www.forbes.com/sites/patrickmoorhead/2023/01/25/are-the-eu-concerns-with-broadcoms-vmware-deal-justified/?sh=eb1953f42e71 https://techcrunch.com/2023/03/22/uk-competition-authority-is-concerned-about-the-61b-broadcom-vmware-deal/? https://twitter.com/danielnewmanUV/status/1638537764831653889?s=20 Disclaimer: This show is for information and entertainment purposes only. While we will discuss publicly traded companies on this show. The contents of this show should not be taken as investment advice.
Google zieht endlich nach und macht den KI-Chatbot Bard in der Suche für erste User verfügbar: Das Suchmaschinenunternehmen hinkt Microsoft und Bing angesichts der Integration eines KI-Chatbots derzeit hinterher. Doch unter der Woche wurde Bard für die ersten Nutzer:innen zur Verfügung gestellt – und die Warteliste füllt sich. Das Tool soll in der Suche dabei unterstützen, die Produktivität zu steigern, Neugier zu befriedigen (oder neu zu wecken) und Ideen oder Recherchen schneller umsetzen zu können. Während Googles AI Push kommt in die Gänge kommt, hat Microsoft das neue Bing schon längst in diverse Dienste integriert und mehrfach um verschiedene Funktionen erweitert. Jetzt bietet der Tech-Konzern sogar einen Bing Image Creator an, der schnell und einfach aus Worten Bilder macht, und mit neuen Tools wie Midjourney AI 5 und Adobes Firefly konkurriert. OnlineMarketing.de-Redakteur Niklas Lewanczik liefert dir in der neuesten Folge des Digital Bash Podcast Weekly Update in unter zehn Minuten nähere Informationen zu den jüngsten KI-Entwicklungen bei Google (die sich auch auf Docs, Gmail und Co. beziehen) Bing, OpenAI und anderen großen Tech Playern. Darüber hinaus informiert er dich über einige der wichtigsten Marketing News der Woche. So hat etwa die österreichischen Datenschutzbehörde einen DSGVO-Verstoß durch Metas Tracking festgestellt, Instagram wird Ads direkt in den Suchergebnissen – und zum Teil sogar als Push-Nachricht – einführen, TikTok erwartet ein großes Umsatzplus bei den Werbeeinnahmen und hat ganz neue Community-Richtlinien vorgestellt (die auch auf KI-Content eingehen) und der Trend Deinfluencing bewegt die Creator auf den Social-Media-Plattformen. Einen Auszug zu den Themen der Woche findest du hier: Google öffnet Zugriff auf KI-Chatbot Bard – doch der ist begrenztNeue Bilder-KI: Microsoft launcht Bing Image CreatorTikTok setzt scharfe Regeln für KI-Content fest – inklusive MarkierungTikTok erwartet über 50 Prozent mehr Werbeeinnahmen – trotz Verboten bei BBC, DR und auf RegierungshandysInstagram: Jetzt auch Ads in Suchergebnissen und per PushMetas Tracking bricht mit DSGVO sagt die österreichische DatenschutzbehördeDeinfluencing auf TikTok: Was der neue Trend für Creator und Brands bedeutetHöre dir die Folge direkt an, um über die wichtigsten Entwicklungen aus der Branche informiert zu sein.Wenn du dich für die Digital Bash-Ausgaben, die Niklas erwähnt, anmelden möchtest, findest du hier den Link zu den Ausgaben.Das OnlineMarketing.de Team wünscht dir ein wunderbares Wochenende. Stay safe and be kind.#marketingimohr #onlinemarketing #digitalbash #podcast #marketing #socialmedia #seo #KI #tech Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In Episode 7 of "This Day in AI Podcast" We Discuss The Launch of Google Bard, GitHub Copilot X, What it Means for The Future of Search, Give Updates on GPT-4, Discuss Bing Image Creator, Adobe FireFly and Cover The Anxiety of AI and The Oportunities and Threats it Creates.00:00 - Crazy Code Comments00:14 - Google Bard is Here! Google Bard Vs Bing Chatbot02:49 - Why Didn't Google Use Claude for Bard?04:50 - GPT-4 Vs Google Bard, According to Bard. Real time knowledge?06:06 - Is The Future of Search In Context in Apps with AI?07:51 - Bill Gates's letter "The Future of AI has Begun". Company Wide AI Agents.11:56 - How Long Until Google Bard is Shutdown? Ask Bard. Will Google AI Catch Up?16:10 - How Important is Speed? Dedicated AI Microsoft Copilot Is Faster. 16:54 - Microsoft Bing Image Creator Running Latest DALL-E. Is Midjourney v5 Better?21:14 - Adobe FireFly Announced22:38 - GitHub Copilot X Announced: Huge Productivity Gains Incoming.25:27 - OpenAI's Jobs and Productivity Paper: Are Jobs Safe with AI?28:21 - Company Wide AI Agents: The Evolution of Jobs? Productivity Gains?34:23 - Can AI Startups Get Killed In Weeks? The Bigger Picture of AI Disruption35:34 - The Unease of AI: Is AI Going To Replace My Job?38:17 - The Desire for Authentic Human Content and Experiences 41:11 - Will AI LLMs Help Accelerate LLM and AI Adoption?42:28 - Are Jobs Where We Have The Most Training Data at Risk First?44:00 - The Next AI Winter? Lack of Training Data?45:35 - Other LLMs, Stanford Alpaca. Custom Models are Coming!48:50 - LLMs in Kids Toys? Products with AI? 49:16 - AI In Agriculture for Decision Making51:11 - The Next Big Industry: Sensors for AI Data Collection & Training? BioGPT52:05 - Model Extraction: Dangers? Can LLMs Create Children?54:17 - ChatGPT Outage: Was Someone Model Extracting? 55:58 - Why It's Important to be Skeptical of AI & The Optimisitic Side1:03:20 - Reverse Prompt Injection, SEO for AI Chatbots: What is AI Truth?If you like this podcast please consider leaving a review. We really appreciate everyone's support.This podcast is available on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify and anywhere else you get your podcast.SOURCES:https://simonwillison.net/2023/Mar/22/dont-trust-ai-to-talk-about-itself/https://i.redd.it/oxfm19ytg4pa1.jpghttps://twitter.com/killedbygoogle/status/1638311005024387072https://www.bing.com/images/create/https://www.adobe.com/sensei/generative-ai/firefly.htmlhttps://github.com/features/preview/copilot-xhttps://twitter.com/T_Goody3/status/1638203321704955904https://www.gatesnotes.com/The-Age-of-AI-Has-Begunhttps://www.vice.com/en/article/g5ypy4/openai-research-says-80-of-us-workers-will-have-jobs-impacted-by-gpthttps://openai.com/research/gpts-are-gptshttps://arxiv.org/pdf/2303.10130.pdf
Well, we've got Google Bard. We've got a new Copilot from GitHub. Bing Image Creator is rolling out. Mozilla AI launches. The low hanging fruit that is plugging AI into NPCs to make games more realistic. And at the very end, some actual non AI news!Links:Google opens early access to its ChatGPT rival Bard — here are our first impressions (The Verge)Microsoft's GitHub to Add OpenAI Chat Functions to Coding Tool (Bloomberg)Microsoft brings OpenAI's DALL-E image creator to the new Bing (TechCrunch)Mozilla launches a new startup focused on ‘trustworthy' AI (TechCrunch)Ubisoft's new AI tool automatically generates dialogue for non-playable game characters (TechCrunch)GPT-4 and professional benchmarks: the wrong answer to the wrong question (AI Snake Oil)Amazon is flooding the zone with new TVs as it crosses 200 million Fire TV devices sold (The Verge)See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Microsoft Loop preview FINALLY arrives Microsoft Loop web app launches in public preview for MSA and work/school accounts - Yeah, it's a Notion rip-off. Alarmingly so. Windows 11 Now, Microsoft is testing Windows 11 features first in Release Preview New Dev channel build: Seconds in the system tray is a game changer! /s Minor changes coming to default apps Based on a single hardware review, it appears that 13th Gen Intel Core processors have the same problem with docks and hubs as do 12th Gen processors. AI all the things Bill Gates describes AI as the biggest technology transformation since the GUI. Bing Chatbot can now generate images from text GitHub launches ChatGPT-4 powered Copilot X Adobe launches responsible/ethical generative AI tools Google launches Bard in early access Mozilla.ai startup goes live Opera adds AI prompts, sidebar ChatGPT Xbox Microsoft's AB acquisition is all about mobile, not COD Microsoft announces it will launch mobile apps store on iPhone and Android as soon as regulators make it possible FOSS patents: We've moved into the acceptance phase, and this acquisition is on track Netflix is expanding its mobile games library dramatically Microsoft releases a third set of Game Pass titles for March Get a Steam Deck for 10 percent off to celebrate its first birthday Tips and Picks Tip of the week: Inbox Zero App pick of the week: Visual Studio Code RunAs Radio this week: SMB over QUIC File Servers with Ned Pyle Brown liquor pick of the week: Ben Nevis 10 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: Miro.com/podcast kolide.com/ww cachefly.com
Microsoft Loop preview FINALLY arrives Microsoft Loop web app launches in public preview for MSA and work/school accounts - Yeah, it's a Notion rip-off. Alarmingly so. Windows 11 Now, Microsoft is testing Windows 11 features first in Release Preview New Dev channel build: Seconds in the system tray is a game changer! /s Minor changes coming to default apps Based on a single hardware review, it appears that 13th Gen Intel Core processors have the same problem with docks and hubs as do 12th Gen processors. AI all the things Bill Gates describes AI as the biggest technology transformation since the GUI. Bing Chatbot can now generate images from text GitHub launches ChatGPT-4 powered Copilot X Adobe launches responsible/ethical generative AI tools Google launches Bard in early access Mozilla.ai startup goes live Opera adds AI prompts, sidebar ChatGPT Xbox Microsoft's AB acquisition is all about mobile, not COD Microsoft announces it will launch mobile apps store on iPhone and Android as soon as regulators make it possible FOSS patents: We've moved into the acceptance phase, and this acquisition is on track Netflix is expanding its mobile games library dramatically Microsoft releases a third set of Game Pass titles for March Get a Steam Deck for 10 percent off to celebrate its first birthday Tips and Picks Tip of the week: Inbox Zero App pick of the week: Visual Studio Code RunAs Radio this week: SMB over QUIC File Servers with Ned Pyle Brown liquor pick of the week: Ben Nevis 10 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: Miro.com/podcast kolide.com/ww cachefly.com
Microsoft Loop preview FINALLY arrives Microsoft Loop web app launches in public preview for MSA and work/school accounts - Yeah, it's a Notion rip-off. Alarmingly so. Windows 11 Now, Microsoft is testing Windows 11 features first in Release Preview New Dev channel build: Seconds in the system tray is a game changer! /s Minor changes coming to default apps Based on a single hardware review, it appears that 13th Gen Intel Core processors have the same problem with docks and hubs as do 12th Gen processors. AI all the things Bill Gates describes AI as the biggest technology transformation since the GUI. Bing Chatbot can now generate images from text GitHub launches ChatGPT-4 powered Copilot X Adobe launches responsible/ethical generative AI tools Google launches Bard in early access Mozilla.ai startup goes live Opera adds AI prompts, sidebar ChatGPT Xbox Microsoft's AB acquisition is all about mobile, not COD Microsoft announces it will launch mobile apps store on iPhone and Android as soon as regulators make it possible FOSS patents: We've moved into the acceptance phase, and this acquisition is on track Netflix is expanding its mobile games library dramatically Microsoft releases a third set of Game Pass titles for March Get a Steam Deck for 10 percent off to celebrate its first birthday Tips and Picks Tip of the week: Inbox Zero App pick of the week: Visual Studio Code RunAs Radio this week: SMB over QUIC File Servers with Ned Pyle Brown liquor pick of the week: Ben Nevis 10 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: Miro.com/podcast kolide.com/ww cachefly.com
Microsoft Loop preview FINALLY arrives Microsoft Loop web app launches in public preview for MSA and work/school accounts - Yeah, it's a Notion rip-off. Alarmingly so. Windows 11 Now, Microsoft is testing Windows 11 features first in Release Preview New Dev channel build: Seconds in the system tray is a game changer! /s Minor changes coming to default apps Based on a single hardware review, it appears that 13th Gen Intel Core processors have the same problem with docks and hubs as do 12th Gen processors. AI all the things Bill Gates describes AI as the biggest technology transformation since the GUI. Bing Chatbot can now generate images from text GitHub launches ChatGPT-4 powered Copilot X Adobe launches responsible/ethical generative AI tools Google launches Bard in early access Mozilla.ai startup goes live Opera adds AI prompts, sidebar ChatGPT Xbox Microsoft's AB acquisition is all about mobile, not COD Microsoft announces it will launch mobile apps store on iPhone and Android as soon as regulators make it possible FOSS patents: We've moved into the acceptance phase, and this acquisition is on track Netflix is expanding its mobile games library dramatically Microsoft releases a third set of Game Pass titles for March Get a Steam Deck for 10 percent off to celebrate its first birthday Tips and Picks Tip of the week: Inbox Zero App pick of the week: Visual Studio Code RunAs Radio this week: SMB over QUIC File Servers with Ned Pyle Brown liquor pick of the week: Ben Nevis 10 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: Miro.com/podcast kolide.com/ww cachefly.com
Three things to know today AI-powered Generative Tech Takes Over: OpenAI's Identity Verification, Bing's Image Creator, and Adobe's Sensei Generative AI Services Legislative Roundup: NLRB Rules on Severance Agreements, UPHOLD Privacy Act & the 32-Hour Workweek Bill AND Distributor relationships and acquisitions: Sentinel One, Ingram Micro, and Accenture make moves Advertiser: https://smbonlineconference.com/ Do you want the show on your podcast app or the written versions of the stories? Subscribe to the Business of Tech: https://www.businessof.tech/subscribe/ Support the show on Patreon: https://patreon.com/mspradio/ Want our stuff? Cool Merch? Wear “Why Do We Care?” - Visit https://mspradio.myspreadshop.com Follow us on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mspradionews/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mspradionews/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mspradio/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/28908079/
Microsoft Loop preview FINALLY arrives Microsoft Loop web app launches in public preview for MSA and work/school accounts - Yeah, it's a Notion rip-off. Alarmingly so. Windows 11 Now, Microsoft is testing Windows 11 features first in Release Preview New Dev channel build: Seconds in the system tray is a game changer! /s Minor changes coming to default apps Based on a single hardware review, it appears that 13th Gen Intel Core processors have the same problem with docks and hubs as do 12th Gen processors. AI all the things Bill Gates describes AI as the biggest technology transformation since the GUI. Bing Chatbot can now generate images from text GitHub launches ChatGPT-4 powered Copilot X Adobe launches responsible/ethical generative AI tools Google launches Bard in early access Mozilla.ai startup goes live Opera adds AI prompts, sidebar ChatGPT Xbox Microsoft's AB acquisition is all about mobile, not COD Microsoft announces it will launch mobile apps store on iPhone and Android as soon as regulators make it possible FOSS patents: We've moved into the acceptance phase, and this acquisition is on track Netflix is expanding its mobile games library dramatically Microsoft releases a third set of Game Pass titles for March Get a Steam Deck for 10 percent off to celebrate its first birthday Tips and Picks Tip of the week: Inbox Zero App pick of the week: Visual Studio Code RunAs Radio this week: SMB over QUIC File Servers with Ned Pyle Brown liquor pick of the week: Ben Nevis 10 Hosts: Leo Laporte, Paul Thurrott, and Richard Campbell Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/windows-weekly Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Check out Paul's blog at thurrott.com The Windows Weekly theme music is courtesy of Carl Franklin. Sponsors: Miro.com/podcast kolide.com/ww cachefly.com
Heute mit: Breached, Tiktok, DPReview, Bing Image Creator
Amazon is shuttering DPReview.com. A premiere site for digital camera reviews for over twenty years. What does it say about the digital camera market? Plus Oppo announced its new flagship phone, the Find X6 Pro. And Microsoft announced it began rolling out its Bing Image Creator to Bing preview testers.Starring Sarah Lane, Terrance Gaines, Roger Chang, Joe.Link to the Show Notes. Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/dtns. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Amazon is shuttering DPReview.com. A premiere site for digital camera reviews for over twenty years. What does it say about the digital camera market? Plus Oppo announced its new flagship phone, the Find X6 Pro. And Microsoft announced it began rolling out its Bing Image Creator to Bing preview testers. Starring Sarah Lane, Terrance Gaines, Roger Chang, Joe, Amos To read the show notes in a separate page click here! Support the show on Patreon by becoming a supporter!