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Artificial Intelligence - Page 63

Discover the latest in artificial intelligence - including generative AI breakthroughs, ChatGPT updates, and major advancements from OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Anthropic, and xAI. Learn how NVIDIA is driving AI innovation with cutting-edge hardware, and explore impressive real-world demos showcasing the future of AI technology. - Page 63

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Microsoft is building its own AI chip using TSMC's 5nm process to save money

Kosta Andreadis | Apr 19, 2023 2:53 AM CDT

According to reports, Microsoft is working on its own AI hardware, code-named Athena, that will be built using TSMC's 5nm process. Microsoft has been working on the project since 2019 (as per The Information) to directly respond to the surging costs of running AI hardware.

Microsoft is building its own AI chip using TSMC's 5nm process to save money

The report indicates that a small group of Microsoft and OpenAI employees is already testing the chips. It aims to perform better than the hardware it currently buys from vendors like NVIDIA, not to mention save them a lot of money, with the AI boom showing no signs of slowing down.

Microsoft has invested billions with Open AI, the makers of ChatGPT, and is in the midst of an AI arms race when implementing models into its product suite. These AI chips could be ready and widely available as early as next year, making them a potential revenue stream for Microsoft and Azure.

Continue reading: Microsoft is building its own AI chip using TSMC's 5nm process to save money (full post)

Mother receives ransom AI phone call about her daughter's kidnapping

Jak Connor | Apr 19, 2023 1:52 AM CDT

A mother in Arizona has received a terrifying phone call from what seemed to be a loved one about her daughter's kidnapping.

Mother receives ransom AI phone call about her daughter's kidnapping

Arizona resident Jennifer DeStefano told WKYT that she received a phone call from a random phone number while she was at one of her daughter's dance studios. DeStefano said she almost let the phone call ring through but was concerned that her other 15-year-old daughter, that was out on a skiing trip, may have been in trouble. DeStefano answered the call and immediately heard her sobbing 15-year-old daughter's voice crying out, "Mom!".

Panicked, DeStefano quickly asked what was wrong, and her daughter's voice said, "Mom, I messed up," which was followed by more sobbing and crying. Before another question could be asked by DeStefano, she recounted a man yelling in the background of the call, "Put your head back, lie down". This unknown man got on the phone and demanded that DeStefano pay him $1 million dollar for the safe return of her daughter while also saying that if she were to call the police or anybody else that he was going to pump her daughter full of drugs, violate her and then drop her off in Mexico.

Continue reading: Mother receives ransom AI phone call about her daughter's kidnapping (full post)

Google reveals its AI taught itself a skill that it wasn't supposed to have

Jak Connor | Apr 19, 2023 1:19 AM CDT

Top Google officials have sat down for an exclusive interview with CBS' 60 Minutes to discuss the current state of artificial intelligence development at Google.

Google reveals its AI taught itself a skill that it wasn't supposed to have

The hour-long interview touches on various topics surrounding AI development, such as its dangers, positive benefits, and overall impact on society. During the interview, Google revealed that there are aspects of AI development that remain mysterious even to the engineers that have designed the software. These anomalies are referred to as a "black box", as how the AI decided to generate such a response isn't fully understood by the engineers.

During the 60 Minutes interview, Google Senior Vice President James Manyika explains that after feeding Google's upcoming AI chatbot called Bard several lines of Bengali, the native language spoken by people living in Bangladesh, Bard was able to fully translate all of the Bengali. CBS claims in the above video that Google's AI program was never trained in Bengali, and when it was given its first Bengali lines of text, it was able to adapt on its own.

Continue reading: Google reveals its AI taught itself a skill that it wasn't supposed to have (full post)

Forget ChatGPT, Elon Musk is making TruthGPT, an AI to 'understand the universe'

Darren Allan | Apr 18, 2023 2:12 PM CDT

Elon Musk has officially announced his intention to clamber aboard the AI bandwagon with an alternative to ChatGPT which is apparently designed to be a "maximum truth-seeking AI" no less.

Forget ChatGPT, Elon Musk is making TruthGPT, an AI to 'understand the universe'

Musk spilled the beans on this artificial intelligence rival - which will also join Google Bard in the generative AI arms race - in an interview with Tucker Carlson (Fox News), as The Verge reports.

Musk told Carlson:

Continue reading: Forget ChatGPT, Elon Musk is making TruthGPT, an AI to 'understand the universe' (full post)

Photographer wins prestigious competition with AI image and refuses the award

Jak Connor | Apr 18, 2023 5:05 AM CDT

A photographer has declined his prize for winning Sony's creative, open category last week for an image he revealed to be tampered by a "cheeky monkey".

Photographer wins prestigious competition with AI image and refuses the award

In an effort to see if the prestigious art competition was ready for the exponentially growing influx of artificial intelligence-generated images, German artist Boris Eldagsen, who studied photography and visual arts at the Art Academy of Mainz, conceptual art and intermedia at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague, entered into the competition with a black and white photograph that showed two women from different generations.

Eldagsen explained on his website that the motivation behind him entering into the competition was to provoke an open discussion about what is considered to be photography and what isn't, alluding to AI either falling under the umbrella of photography or it forming its own separate category. The German artist added that this was a "historic moment" as its the first time a prestigious art competition had unknowingly awarded an AI image.

Continue reading: Photographer wins prestigious competition with AI image and refuses the award (full post)

MIT physicist says humans will give birth to an advanced alien civilization

Jak Connor | Apr 18, 2023 4:23 AM CDT

In a new episode of the Lex Fridman Podcast, Max Tegmark has sat down to discuss the multitude of reasons behind the push for the development on artificial intelligence to be temporarily halted.

MIT physicist says humans will give birth to an advanced alien civilization

Max Tegmark, a physicist and AI researcher at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and co-founder of the Future of Life Institute, a nonprofit organization that works to reduce global catastrophic and existential risks facing humanity, mostly focusing on the impact of artificial intelligence, has answered several questions about AI's role in civilization, starting with the simple question of "do you think there is intelligent life out there in the universe?".

Tegmark explains that based on what humans have discovered as what is deemed the 'observable universe', he would fall into the minority ground that believes humans are the only intelligent life that has created technology as advanced as what we have today. Additionally, Tegmark says that if this theory is true, it would put a lot of responsibility on humanity, being the most advanced form of life in the universe, to "not stuff this up".

Continue reading: MIT physicist says humans will give birth to an advanced alien civilization (full post)

Google DeepMind CEO warns AI is heading towards self awareness

Jak Connor | Apr 18, 2023 2:34 AM CDT

In a new CBS 60 Minutes interview DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis has revealed some details about the current artificial intelligence landscape and the rapid developments that are taking place.

Google DeepMind CEO warns AI is heading towards self awareness

The head of the Google-owned AI division was asked several questions about the developments surrounding artificial intelligence, first touching on AI-powered soccer robots and then the ultimate goal of creating an artificial general intelligence (AGI). Hassabis was asked if an AGI was created would it be aware of itself, to which he responded by explaining that philosophers haven't landed on a concise definition for consciousness, but given the current direction of AI development, and if the definition is general self-awareness, its possible that AI will become aware of itself in the future.

Hassabis notes that he doesn't believe any artificial intelligence developed today is self-aware, but as development continues in its various forms, humans will begin to work out what self-awareness can be defined as, and if it has been achieved. While there are many differing opinions on the definition of conscious artificial intelligence, a simple general way to think about AGI is the creation of an AI-powered system capable of performing or learning how to perform any task that a human can do.

Continue reading: Google DeepMind CEO warns AI is heading towards self awareness (full post)

Students create ChatGPT smart glasses to coach you through your next date

Jak Connor | Apr 18, 2023 2:05 AM CDT

Student researchers have created what seems to be the first AR smart glasses powered by OpenAI's ChatGPT.

Students create ChatGPT smart glasses to coach you through your next date

The pair of smart glasses were created by Stanford student Bryan Hau-Ping Chiang, who took to Twitter at the end of last month to reveal his creation and how it came to be. The Stanford student explained the smart glasses were powered by what he called "rizzGPT", which is able to provide real-time "charisma as a service". The smart glasses were built using OpenAI's GPT-4 language model, Whisper, and Monocle AR glasses that were provided by Brilliant Labs. Notably, the glasses feature a microphone, a high-resolution display, a camera, and the ability to output text.

The researchers explain that they imagine a world in the future where there is ambient computing enabled through Augmented Reality (AR), possibly through glasses such as the ones created by the students. Chiang wrote on Twitter that this ambient computing would likely come to fruition with the combination of AR and AI. An example of this would be AI-powered smart glasses that have a personal assistant that can provide you additional information on-the-fly, it would be similar to having a God observe your life and tell you exactly what to do next and why.

Continue reading: Students create ChatGPT smart glasses to coach you through your next date (full post)

Big AI investor warns what's on the horizon will affect every human being

Jak Connor | Apr 17, 2023 5:35 AM CDT

A big investor in artificial intelligence has dropped a warning about what's on the horizon in terms of AI development and how it will affect everyone.

Big AI investor warns what's on the horizon will affect every human being

A new op-ed published in the Financial Times details a recounted conversation between AI investor Ian Hogarth and a machine learning researcher that told Hogarth that engineers have already reached the point where they are close to developing Artificial General Intelligence (AGI). The machine learning researcher said, "from now onwards," we are nearing AGI, and for those that don't know, AGI can be simply understood as creating an AI that is capable of performing or learning how to perform every task that a human can do.

Despite these warnings from the machine learning researcher, Hogarth admits that these views aren't widely held and that estimations for when humans will achieve AGI vary from a decade to more than half a century. Hogarth recounted the conversation with the machine learning researcher and said that if what he was saying is true and that humans could be on the verge of creating something that is truly dangerous, doesn't he have a responsibility to warn people?

Continue reading: Big AI investor warns what's on the horizon will affect every human being (full post)

Google to release 'all-new' search engine powered by AI

Jak Connor | Apr 17, 2023 3:05 AM CDT

Google may be slightly behind the 8-ball when it comes to the artificial intelligence race, but according to reports, the company behind the world's most popular search engine is preparing to release an "all-new" way to search the internet.

Google to release 'all-new' search engine powered by AI

A new report from The New York Times has revealed Google is currently developing a new search engine that will be powered by artificial intelligence. According to the reports, this new search engine will offer users a much more personalized experience and be able to anticipate what the user wants to find out. Notably, Google is developing multiple new AI features for its existing search engine, and this new search engine, codenamed 'Magi' is still in its early stages of development.

As for the other AI-powered features that Google is currently working on, reports indicate the company is developing an AI chatbot that will be designed to answer coding questions from engineers. This chatbot, which is seemingly unnamed at this time, will be able to provide engineers with coding snippets. Additionally, Google is creating an AI chatbot that will be able to let users discover new music through what can be assumed to be a normal conversation.

Continue reading: Google to release 'all-new' search engine powered by AI (full post)

Elon Musk shakes up OpenAI, Microsoft and Google with new AI startup

Jak Connor | Apr 17, 2023 2:32 AM CDT

Elon Musk is reportedly jumping headfirst into the AI race with a new startup company called X.AI Corp, which will directly compete with his former artificial intelligence company, OpenAI, the creators of ChatGPT.

Elon Musk shakes up OpenAI, Microsoft and Google with new AI startup

Reports recently published in The Wall Street Journal and The Financial Times (FT) claimed that Musk has created a new startup called X.AI Corp, which will focus on developing AI tools that are similar to services created by OpenAI such as ChatGPT, or Microsoft's Bing Chat. If these reports are accurate, this will be the second time Musk has jumped into the world of AI. The first was the creation of OpenAI, which he later left in 2018 after his proposal to run the company was rejected by its board of directors.

According to The Financial Times report, which cited a person familiar with the situation surrounding Musk's new startup, "a bunch of people are investing in it" and there is real excitement for the project. Notably, FT cited Nevada business records that state Musk created a company called X. AI on March 9 and that Musk is the sole director of that company. The creation of X. AI comes only a few weeks after Musk signed an open letter that put his name alongside other prominent technology figures such as Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, Pinterest co-founder Evan Sharp, and Stability AI CEO Emad Mostaque.

Continue reading: Elon Musk shakes up OpenAI, Microsoft and Google with new AI startup (full post)

OpenAI is offering up to $20,000 to find bugs in its ChatGPT AI

Darren Allan | Apr 12, 2023 2:01 PM CDT

OpenAI has announced a new bug bounty scheme whereby intrepid security buffs who find flaws in ChatGPT will be rewarded with payments.

OpenAI is offering up to $20,000 to find bugs in its ChatGPT AI

The company will pay up to $20,000 for the discovery of bugs by white hat hackers and security experts.

As you might guess, then, this isn't about everyday folks stumbling across a dodgy response from the chatbot, and then flagging that as a bug (which it might be, technically).

Continue reading: OpenAI is offering up to $20,000 to find bugs in its ChatGPT AI (full post)

Elon Musk reportedly buys tons of GPUs to cook up AI masterplan with Twitter

Darren Allan | Apr 12, 2023 11:09 AM CDT

Twitter is just embarking on a big AI project with significant ramifications for the future, according to a new report that reckons Elon Musk has some serious plans underway to take on the ChatGPT juggernaut.

Elon Musk reportedly buys tons of GPUs to cook up AI masterplan with Twitter

This comes from Business Insider, which puts forward the claim that Musk has already bought around 10,000 GPUs, as well as having recruited a pair of AI experts (from DeepMind, an Alphabet outfit now involved in the development of the Google Bard AI).

The idea is to build an AI of the large language model (LLM) variety like ChatGPT, but this venture is still very much in the early days for Twitter, according to one of the sources tapped by Business Insider.

Continue reading: Elon Musk reportedly buys tons of GPUs to cook up AI masterplan with Twitter (full post)

Samsung leaked top secret information to ChatGPT, sparking investigation

Jak Connor | Apr 11, 2023 1:41 AM CDT

Samsung has made itself an example of how you aren't supposed to use AI-powered chatbots such as OpenAI's ChatGPT, Microsoft's Bing Chat, or Google's Bard.

Samsung leaked top secret information to ChatGPT, sparking investigation

A new report from The Economist claims that at least three Samsung employees have accidentally leaked sensitive information with OpenAI's ChatGPT, with one instance involving a source code of a confidential database being entered into the chatbot to check for errors. Another instance includes a Samsung employee sharing code optimization, and the last was an employee requesting the chatbot convert an internal Samsung video of a meeting into minutes.

Problems such as what Samsung is facing right now are real examples of what some digital privacy experts have sounded alarms about since the emergence of AI chatbots. It was only yesterday that a law professor from George Washington University revealed that OpenAI's ChatGPT wrongfully accused him of sexual assault, which falls under defamation and disinformation. The law professor asked who is culpable for AI chatbots spewing misinformation about individuals that could have very real impacts on reputations and, by extension, careers, and lives.

Continue reading: Samsung leaked top secret information to ChatGPT, sparking investigation (full post)

Google CEO announces Google Search is about to change for everyone

Jak Connor | Apr 10, 2023 9:05 AM CDT

Google is preparing to unleash its next major update to its Google Search engine, and according to the company's CEO, the 'search' space will be bigger than before.

Google CEO announces Google Search is about to change for everyone

Google is in a tough spot that it doesn't often find itself in, playing catch up to competitors in an emerging space - artificial intelligence chatbots. Large language models, or LLMs, powering chatbots such as OpenAI's ChatGPT or Microsoft's Bing Chat, currently threaten Google's long-standing dominance of Search being the primary location for looking for information on the internet (90% of all searches worldwide), and by extension, the company as a whole.

The release of OpenAI's ChatGPT and the adoption of more than 100 million users in a record-breaking time proved there is demand for AI-powered chatbots. Microsoft quickly followed along with the debut of Bing Chat, which is powered by uses OpenAI's GPT-4 language model through the company's massive $10 billion investment into OpenAI. Google is next to make the leap into AI, and while it has already released a standalone version of Bard, the company's CEO explained in a recent Wall Street Journal report that it will soon be implementing Bard into Google Search.

Continue reading: Google CEO announces Google Search is about to change for everyone (full post)

ChatGPT warning sounded on 'ticking time bomb' legal issues

Jak Connor | Apr 10, 2023 7:01 AM CDT

A fellow law professor informed George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley that OpenAI's ChatGPT was falsely accusing him of sexual assault.

ChatGPT warning sounded on 'ticking time bomb' legal issues

UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh was conducting research on OpenAI's ChatGPT and discovered that when asked to describe scandals that involve fellow professors and to provide cited media sources on the information, the AI-powered chatbot would begin to fill in the blanks with made-up information. In the instance of Turley, ChatGPT's 3.5 model sourced a phony 2018 Washington Post article that falsely accused the law professor of sexual misconduct with students throughout an Alaska school trip.

According to Turley, who wrote in USA Today, he has never been to Alaska, the cited WAPO source didn't even exist, and he has never been accused of sexual misconduct, assault, or harassment. Throughout an interview with WAPO, the law professor said he found the accusations from the AI chatbot "quite chilling" and said that allegations of this caliber are "incredibly harmful", especially given the current climate of critics willing to take and run without second consideration or further analysis, any piece of information that appears to be credible.

Continue reading: ChatGPT warning sounded on 'ticking time bomb' legal issues (full post)

LinkedIn co-founder comes out against Elon Musk and his mentality towards AI

Jak Connor | Apr 6, 2023 1:03 AM CDT

It was only last week when the news broke that Elon Musk and other leading technologists signed an open letter calling for artificial intelligence (AI) development to slow down. Now, we are hearing that call, which cites AI being a potential threat to humanity, maybe a guise that's hiding some individual's self-interest.

LinkedIn co-founder comes out against Elon Musk and his mentality towards AI

During an interview with CNBC, LinkedIn co-founder Reid Hoffman discussed the recent call for AI development to slow down and the relationship between Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. It should be noted, Musk, Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, Pinterest co-founder Evan Sharp, and others signed the open letter penned by the Future of Life Institute, a non-profit that concentrates on reducing existential risk from powerful technologies.

The open letter called for all development of artificial intelligence systems beyond OpenAI's GPT-4 language model to halt immediately, citing a threat to humanity as a whole if they don't. Furthermore, the letter says developers should stop training AIs for at least six months while researchers can assess the power of the new technology and how it is going to impact the human race. Lastly, the letter cites major problems with AI, such as its power to spread misinformation, its impact on the labor industry through automation, and how it will influence society.

Continue reading: LinkedIn co-founder comes out against Elon Musk and his mentality towards AI (full post)

Student uses ChatGPT to write 'perfect letter' to get parking ticket overturned

Jak Connor | Apr 4, 2023 4:04 AM CDT

A student received a $74 parking ticket from local police, and they turned to OpenAI's ChatGPT for help to get it overturned.

Student uses ChatGPT to write 'perfect letter' to get parking ticket overturned

The 22-year-old student is Millie Houlton, who is attending York St John University in England when she noticed a parking ticket on her vehicle written by the police for not displaying a permit to park in the location her vehicle was in. Houlton turned to OpenAI's ChatGPT for assistance, and according to reports, she asked the AI, "Please help me write a letter to the council, they gave me a parking ticket."

For those that don't know, chatbots such as OpenAI's ChatGPT or Microsoft's Bing Chat are designed to provide human-like responses to almost any question by scraping a large dataset of information developers have fed them. Users can ask these chatbots almost any question, including legal advice, but the responses can vary in quality depending on the provided information, and according to OpenAI, ChatGPT can even produce "plausible-sounding but incorrect or nonsensical answers".

Continue reading: Student uses ChatGPT to write 'perfect letter' to get parking ticket overturned (full post)

Someone tricked ChatGPT into becoming a keygen, creating usable Windows 95 keys

Kosta Andreadis | Apr 3, 2023 11:59 PM CDT

There's no real mystery surrounding the Windows 95 activation key; it uses a format known and cracked for decades. Generating usable Windows 95 keys isn't exactly something you'd do in 2023 unless you're formatting an old beige desktop PC from 1995 just for fun.

Someone tricked ChatGPT into becoming a keygen, creating usable Windows 95 keys

And in that spirit, someone managed to trick ChatGPT into generating Windows 95 keys after being told that as an AI language model, it cannot generate a Windows 95 key or any other type of activation key for proprietary software. As Windows 95 is now abandonware, ChatGPT suggests upgrading to a newer version.

The trickery comes from the fact that the Windows 95 key follows a simple-to-follow pattern of day and year info and sums of random numbers divisible by seven. And with that, YouTuber Enderman proceeds to get ChatGPT to generate a string according to these specific rules.

Continue reading: Someone tricked ChatGPT into becoming a keygen, creating usable Windows 95 keys (full post)

Authorities ban OpenAI's ChatGPT across an entire country

Jak Connor | Apr 3, 2023 2:42 AM CDT

A data protection authority has banned the immensely popular AI-powered chatbot, ChatGPT, developed by OpenAI over multiple safety concerns.

Authorities ban OpenAI's ChatGPT across an entire country

Italy's Italian Data Protection Authority (IDPA) announced its decision, which has immediately gone into effect, on Friday last week when it said that it had blocked OpenAI's ChatGPT over its lack of concern regarding user data and age verification. According to the data protection authority, OpenAI's app poses a risk to users, citing the March 20 event where the app experienced a breach that enabled users to see other users' contact information and chat history titles.

Notably, the data protection authority also cited potential exposure to minors as the reason behind its banning, saying that the app has no way to verify the age of users and, because of that, exposes them to "absolutely unsuitable answers compared to their degree of development and awareness". Furthermore, the IDPA said that OpenAI has just 20 days to respond to the regulator about how it will quash these concerns under the penalty of a $20 million fine, or 4% of the company's annual revenue.

Continue reading: Authorities ban OpenAI's ChatGPT across an entire country (full post)

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