Google is expanding Gemini’s personalized AI image generation to eligible free users in the U.S., allowing the chatbot to create images based on your interests and data from connected Google apps.
Meta instructed contractors to pose as teenagers and send thousands of sensitive prompts to rival AI chatbots to test their responses, according to a new report
Since 2017, Iason Gabriel has worked at the tech giant, trying to anticipate – and think through – the impact of AI. But as commercial and geopolitical pressures escalate, can ethicists make any difference?
In 2017, a 33-year-old political philosopher named Iason Gabriel was told by a friend that he ought to apply for a job at DeepMind, the London-based subsidiary of Google where much of its AI research was concentrated. The suggestion was not an obvious one.
Gabriel was a cheerful but intense junior academic with a passion for Vipassana meditation and what his brother calls “enthusiastic” rock climbing. The eldest son of a Greek management professor and a British documentary maker, Gabriel split his time between teaching and international development work. At the University of Oxford, where he was a fellow at St John’s College, Gabriel taught courses on political theory and wrote papers on the moral contortions of “yuppie ethics” and the ethical blind spots of effective altruism. When
The historic seizure is part of an action against an international hacking group that targeted international companies and individuals in Europe and the U.S. ARMA stressed that this was the first time it received cryptocurrency to manage in its own crypto wallet. Ukraine’s ARMA Receives Cryptocurrency in Custody For The First Time International intelligence and […]
Hundreds of contractors working on a project for Meta pretended to be kids—and then prompted rival chatbots like Gemini and ChatGPT to discuss high-risk subjects.
Alphabet's inclusion in the Dow signals a shift in market dynamics, stabilizing tech stocks and boosting investor confidence amid AI spending concerns.
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Welcome to AI Insider’s The Week Ahead in AI. See the key developments and events we’re watching June 28-July 4. Weekend AI News Briefs Google Caps Meta’s Gemini Use as AI Demand Strains Capacity The Financial Times reported that Google has capped Meta’s access to its Gemini AI models after the social media company requested more […]
Reading about the “revolutionary” nature of generative AI technology these days, it’s hard not to feel a little left out.
Sure, services like Google’s Gemini and its contemporaries can be useful in certain limited, specific areas for productivity purposes. But working with them can also be pretty disheartening and overwhelming — from prompt fatigue and an onslaught of AI workslop to the fear of lost jobs and even just the simple inconsistencies and inaccuracies these systems are so prone to providing. (And that’s to say nothing of the ever-increasing creepy factor that often accompanies this type of technology.)
More and more, it seems the most significant impact of these systems is in areas like coding, where AI is allowing ambitious tech-heads to create their own custom programs with limited to no programming knowledge (but a lot of time, vision, and patience) — as well as allowing accomplished coders to produce products more quickly by letting AI do the dirty work and then spending