Google's AI-powered Search Generative Experience is happy to list the advantages of genocide and provide cooking instructions for poisonous mushrooms.
Take a quick look at the newest and weirdest happenings in AI.
DEF CON's big AI hack-fest. Plus: OpenAI's new moderation efforts, NYT lawsuit drama, and Werner Herzog.
The open source coding tool will be dubbed ‘Code LlaMA’ and is based on the company’s language model LlaMA 2.
That pirated set of works contained 37 GB worth of text for training AI. Companies like Meta have already used it to train their language models.
A Microsoft "special event" is coming to NYC in September, creating rumors that it will introduce new AI functions and hardware upgrades.
Researchers found lefty leanings in some of the AI's responses, which ChatGPT likely picked up from its training data.
News outlets accused OpenAI of using their articles to create data for its chatbot, with The New York Times considering filing a lawsuit against the company.
The wire service claims AI won’t replace its journalists, and any info gathered from ChatGPT should be considered ‘unvetted source material.’
The erroneous press release could be illegal as it had the potential to move markets with false information.
The news media is in the throes of figuring out just how to approach the emergent AI industry.
The 80-year-old director narrated the audio-book for “I Am Code: An Artificial Intelligence Speaks,” a poetry collection by ChatGPT’s brother.
Amazon assures customers it will weed out fraudulent, AI-generated product reviews.
Gizmodo is launching a new weekly thing about artificial intelligence.
Zoom executives promised Monday that the company wouldn't use your calls as AI fodder, even while its TOS said otherwise.
The voice control feature met its demise as Microsoft discontinued Cortana support on Windows 11, with support also gone from Android and iOS.
A new DARPA competition will reward innovators who find AI-based solutions that will "rapidly defend critical infrastructure code from attack."
Google’s AI mining-by-default proposal to the Australian government comes a month after the company declared it would scrape all the internet's data.
IBM researchers convinced large language models to play a multi-layered "game" of offering incorrect advice to prove they are "ethical and fair."
The site, which analyzed word usage and provided statistics, did not have consent to use copyrighted works within its program.
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