Google's DiffusionGemma AI Hits 1,000 Tokens Per Second—And It's Free
DiffusionGemma hits 1,000 tokens per second by ditching word-by-word generation entirely. It just doesn't run on most people's machines yet.
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The ruling could increase compliance costs for AI firms globally, prompting enhanced verification and liability measures across the industry. The post German court rules Google liable for false statements in AI Overviews appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Read full articleDiffusionGemma hits 1,000 tokens per second by ditching word-by-word generation entirely. It just doesn't run on most people's machines yet.
OpenAI's actions highlight the growing role of AI firms in countering state-sponsored influence, emphasizing AI's impact on global security dynamics. The post OpenAI bans China-linked accounts for using ChatGPT in US influence campaigns appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Diffusion AI is most common in image generation, but it can make text outputs much faster.
The ruling sets a precedent for tech liability, potentially leading to more lawsuits and financial risks for social media companies. The post Google, Meta denied new trial in youth social media addiction case appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
Government equity in AI firms could reshape industry dynamics, potentially favoring companies like Meta and Google by avoiding direct oversight. The post Meta’s Joel Kaplan responds to Trump’s government AI ownership proposal appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
New college graduates around the country have been booing and heckling commencement speakers who hype up AI. Microsoft would like everyone to talk it out. In a blog post running more than 3,100 words, Microsoft vice chair and president Brad Smith addressed the recent spate of viral clips from graduation ceremonies, like former Google CEO Eric Schmidt getting an earful at the University of Arizona, or the speaker in Florida who seemed surprised when students booed at the mention of AI as "the next industrial revolution." The videos speak to a broader societal sentiment around AI - the technology is deeply unpopular even as technology compani … Read the full story at The Verge.
The lawsuit could redefine AI training practices, impacting tech firms reliant on user-generated content and sparking broader IP rights debates. The post Independent musicians sue Google, claiming Lyria AI was trained on 44 million YouTube clips without consent appeared first on Crypto Briefing.
A group of independent musicians is suing Google claiming it trained Lyria on their uploads. | Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge If you've uploaded a song to YouTube, Google almost certainly considers your video fair game for training its Lyria music AI, it just won't admit it right now. A group of independent musicians is suing Google, claiming that it illegally used songs they uploaded to YouTube to train its Lyria 3 model. Google has filed a motion to dismiss the case, saying: Their lawsuit is based on the unsupported hypothesis that Google trained on their specific works. Even accepting their untested allegations as fact, the Complaint cannot stand. Plaintiffs each granted YouTube, and Google - which provides the service-a broad license to use the uploaded con … Read the full story at The Verge.