-
+39 +8
Google is reportedly testing an AI tool that can generate news articles | Engadget
Google is testing a new AI technology codenamed "Genesis" that can generate news articles, according to 'The New York Times.'.
-
+50 +8
Asian American workers could be the most heavily affected by AI
Asian Americans and women in the workforce are the most concentrated in fields where AI could assist or replace their job tasks, according to new research.
-
+36 +8
AI can identify passwords by sound of keys being pressed, study suggests
Researchers create system using sound recordings that can work out what is being typed with more than 90% accuracy
-
+33 +7
Google and Universal Music seek royalties for singers from ‘fake’ AI-generated songs
Disruption from artificial intelligence impact risks a ‘calamity’ for the music industry
-
+31 +10
‘It’s already way beyond what humans can do’: will AI wipe out architects?
It’s revolutionising building – but could AI kill off an entire profession? Perhaps not, finds our writer, as he enters a world where Corbusier-style marvels and 500-room hotels are just a click away
-
+34 +7
AI now lets you have real conversations with NPCs in video games
Future video games could feature a near-infinite number of possible storylines.
-
+47 +7
AI improves breast cancer detection rate by 20 percent
Results from a study in Sweden show the potential of using artificial intelligence in mammography.
-
+29 +6
PEN America: Using Artificial Intelligence to Ban Books Only Makes the Problem Worse
As book bans escalate in schools and libraries across the country, a school district in Iowa is adding a new—albeit “deeply misguided”—move to this censorious trend by relying on ChatGPT to decide which books can stay and which have to go, PEN America said today.
-
+45 +9
ChatGPT gets code questions wrong 52% of the time
But its suggestions are so annoyingly plausible
-
+42 +9
Google AI breakthrough could dramatically reduce planes’ global warming impact
Contrails currently account for a third of global warming from aviation
-
+44 +6
Open Source AI and the Llama 2 Kerfuffle
The definition of open source is being challenged in the age of AI. Three experts join the conversation to discuss what needs to evolve.
-
+43 +6
Microsoft pulls article recommending Ottawa Food Bank to tourists
"Consider going into it on an empty stomach," said a Microsoft Travel article written using "algorithmic techniques."
-
+42 +9
AI-generated art cannot be copyrighted, rules a US Federal Judge
“Human authorship is a bedrock requirement of copyright.”
-
+42 +6
AI writing fails show why it can’t replace human writers
Everybody is looking for a shortcut, but not every shortcut is smart. These AI writing fails from Microsoft show how short-sighted it is to replace writers with machines."
-
+44 +7
Scientists found more than 1,000 AI spam bots trying to scam people and steal their social media profiles — and regulators can't keep up
Social media is being flooded with spammy AI content. Research by Indiana University details how artificial intelligence is being used to scam people on social media platforms.
-
+44 +12
Building LLM Apps with Redis on Google's Vertex AI
Google's Vertex AI platform recently integrated generative AI capabilities, including the PaLM 2 chat model and an in-console generative AI studio. Here, you learn about a novel reference architecture and how to get the most from these tools with your existing Redis investment.
-
+37 +6
AI revolution in video games has industry players treading warily
From generating story lines to coding entire games to turning ideas into animation, artificial intelligence is front and centre at Gamescom, one of the video game industry's biggest fairs.
-
+37 +6
OpenAI finally introduces a business version of ChatGPT
ChatGPT Enterprise arrives. Here's what we know.
-
+43 +7
Who says the robots are not trying to kill us?
Mushroom pickers urged to avoid foraging books on Amazon that appear to be written by AI. Sample of books scored 100% on AI detection test as experts warn they contain dangerous advice
-
+38 +7
AI-discovered drugs will be for sale sooner than you think
It takes forever to get drugs on the market. AI could help speed up the process.
Submit a link
Start a discussion