Generative AI
Is Google Displacing Musicians With Its New Generative AI System: Music LM? (Part 1 Of A 2 Part Series)
What is the impact of taking all the musical know-how and ingesting into an AI brain with only asking questions expressing your musical tastes? Who needs to be a musician to entertain when we will soon be able to create our own music even more easily and tap into the human genius of every muscian that has a recording? Google researchers say MusicLM is based on a model generating high-fidelity music from text descriptions such as "a calming violin melody backed by a distorted guitar riff". You can find the details on GitHub. MusicLM is built on a neural network, and trained on a large music data set of over280,000 hours of music, enabling it to automatically produce innovative music tracks of diverse instruments, genres, and concepts based on text descriptions.
261: Impact of ChatGPT & Generative Artificial Intelligence - Invest Like a Boss
ChatGPT has taken over the conversations of the internet and (literally) writing millions of new conversations utilizing generative AI technology. We bring back guest Tom Taulli (last on ILAB 163) to break down the basics of ChatGPT technology, the company that created it and how we may be able to invest int he future of Artificial Intelligence. Sam and Derek then go through their experiments with using ChatGPT and its potential world changing impact on technology as we know it. Tom Taulli is an advisor/board member to startups and the author of Artificial Intelligence Basics: A Non-Technical Introduction and The Robotic Process Automation Handbook: A Guide to Implementing RPA Systems. He also writes for various publications like Forbes.com,
ChatGPT is suddenly everywhere. Are we ready?
For a product that its own creators, in a marketing pique, once declared "too dangerous" to release to the general public, OpenAI's ChatGPT is seemingly everywhere these days. The versatile automated text generation (ATG) system, which is capable of outputting copy that is nearly indistinguishable from a human writer's work, is officially still in beta but has already been utilized in dozens of novel applications, some of which extend far beyond the roles ChatGPT was originally intended for -- like that time it simulated an operational Linux shell or that other time when it passed the entrance exam to Wharton Business School. The hype around ChatGPT is understandably high, with myriad startups looking to license the technology for everything from conversing with historical figures to talking to historical literature, from learning other languages to generating exercise routines and restaurant reviews. But with these technical advancements come with a slew of opportunities for misuse and outright harm. And if our previous hamfisted attempts at handling the spread of deepfake video and audio technologies were any indication, we're dangerously underprepared for the havoc that at-scale, automated disinformation production will wreak upon our society.
AI models spit out photos of real people and copyrighted images
These image-generating AI models are trained on vast data sets consisting of images with text descriptions that have been scraped from the internet. The latest generation of the technology works by taking images in the data set and changing one pixel at a time until the original image is nothing but a collection of random pixels. The AI model then reverses the process to make the pixelated mess into a new image. The paper is the first time researchers have managed to prove that these AI models memorize images in their training sets, says Ryan Webster, a PhD student at the University of Caen Normandy in France, who has studied privacy in other image generation models but was not involved in the research. This could have implications for startups wanting to use generative AI models in health care, because it shows that these systems risk leaking sensitive private information.
Gooly, AI for Kids
Hi, my name's Daniel and I want to introduce you to Gooly a chatbot with which you can interact with OpenAI's GPT3 artificial intelligence engine, both by typing on the keyboard and by conversing with your voice. Now Gooly is destined to answer questions for the little ones!! Developed with by Daniel Atik danielatik.com
Sam Altman's big problem? ChatGPT needs to get 'woke' if he wants cash from corporate America
OpenAI is ready to start capitalizing on ChatGPT's buzz. On Wednesday, the firm announced it will offer a pilot $20-a-month subscription version of the chatbot called ChatGPT Plus, which gives priority access to users during peak time and faster responses. The free version remains available but is so popular that it is often at capacity or slow to give responses. In a clear push for commercialization, OpenAI also said it will roll out an API waitlist, different paid tiers, and business plans. OpenAI, it seems, believes enterprises will be willing to pay for its chatbot's capabilities.
ChatGPT may be coming for our jobs. Here are the 10 roles that AI is most likely to replace.
That's because AI is able to read, write, and understand text-based data well, she added. "Analyzing and interpreting vast amounts of language based data and information is a skill that you'd expect generative AI technologies to ramp up on," Madgavkar said. Economist Paul Krugman said in a New York Times op-ed that ChatGPT may be able to do tasks like reporting and writing "more efficiently than humans." The media industry is already beginning to experiment with AI-generated content. Tech news site CNET used an AI tool similar to ChatGPT to write dozens of articles -- though the publisher has had to issue a number of corrections -- and BuzzFeed announced that it will use tech from the ChatGPT maker to generate new forms of content.
Google poised to release chatbot technology after ChatGPT success
Google is to make its chatbot technology available to the public in "the coming weeks and months" as it responds to the success of ChatGPT, a Microsoft-backed artificial intelligence chatbot that has become a global phenomenon after it was made available free of charge. Sundar Pichai, the chief executive of Google's owner, Alphabet, said the use of AI had reached an "inflection point" and the company was "extremely well positioned" in the field. Pichai referred to two so-called large language models developed by the company, LaMDA and PaLM, with the former set to be released soon. This week CNBC reported that Google had begun testing an AI chatbot similar to ChatGPT called Apprentice Bard, which uses LaMDA technology. LaMDA shot to prominence last year when Google suspended and then dismissed an engineer after he went public with claims that LaMDA was "sentient".
The Age of Artificial Intelligence: Let's talk about ChatGPT
In comparison, according to Sensor Tower, TikTok took about nine months after its global launch to reach 100 million users, while Instagram took 2.5 years ChatGPT can create articles, essays, jokes, and even poems in response to prompts. OpenAI, a private company backed by Microsoft Corp, made it public for free in late November. It is worth noting that ChatGPT does not work in Ukraine OpenAI closed access to the API on which the new chatbot works for Ukrainians. The Ministry of Digitization appealed to the developer to open access to it for Ukrainians, and the Minister of Digital Transformation Mykhailo Fedorov tagged the OpenAI company on his Twitter. After all, all major issues in 2022 will be resolved there However, the issue of access to technology in Ukraine has not yet been resolved.
Sports Illustrated Publisher Taps AI
The publisher of Sports Illustrated and other outlets is using artificial intelligence to help produce articles and pitch journalists potential topics to follow, the latest example of a media company investing in the emerging technology. The Arena Group Holdings, whose publications include TheStreet, Men's Journal and Dealbreaker, said it is working with AI startups Jasper and Nota as part of an effort to generate stories that pull information from its own library of content. The company is also using technology from OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, a chatbot that has generated considerable buzz among consumers and businesses due to its humanlike, content-producing capabilities.