Here's why we need to start thinking of AI as "normal"
Instead, according to the researchers, AI is a general-purpose technology whose application might be better compared to the drawn-out adoption of electricity or the internet than to nuclear weapons--though they concede this is in some ways a flawed analogy. The core point, Kapoor says, is that we need to start differentiating between the rapid development of AI methods--the flashy and impressive displays of what AI can do in the lab--and what comes from the actual applications of AI, which in historical examples of other technologies lag behind by decades. "Much of the discussion of AI's societal impacts ignores this process of adoption," Kapoor told me, "and expects societal impacts to occur at the speed of technological development." In other words, the adoption of useful artificial intelligence, in his view, will be less of a tsunami and more of a trickle. In the essay, the pair make some other bracing arguments: terms like "superintelligence" are so incoherent and speculative that we shouldn't use them; AI won't automate everything but will birth a category of human labor that monitors, verifies, and supervises AI; and we should focus more on AI's likelihood to worsen current problems in society than the possibility of it creating new ones.
Elon Musk's Doge conflicts of interest worth 2.37bn, Senate report says
Elon Musk and his companies face at least 2.37bn in legal exposure from federal investigations, litigation and regulatory oversight, according to a new report from Senate Democrats. The report attempts to put a number to Musk's many conflicts of interest through his work with his so-called "department of government efficiency" (Doge), warning that he may seek to use his influence to avoid legal liability. The report, which was published on Monday by Democratic members of the Senate homeland security committee's permanent subcommittee on investigations, looked at 65 actual or potential actions against Musk across 11 separate agencies. Investigators calculated the financial liabilities Musk and his companies, such as Tesla, SpaceX and Neuralink, may face in 45 of those actions. Since Donald Trump won re-election last year and Musk took on the role of de facto head of Doge in January, ethics watchdogs and Democratic officials have warned that the Tesla CEO could use his power to oust regulators and quash investigations into his companies.
Mycopunk is an upbeat love letter to extraction shooters
The extraction-shooter genre is getting a little more crowded and a lot more stylish with the announcement of Mycopunk, a four-player, first-person romp from indie studio Pigeons at Play and publisher Devolver Digital. Mycopunk is coming to Steam in early access this year. Mycopunk stars four eccentric robots who've been hired by an intergalactic megacorporation to exterminate an invasive, violent fungus that's taken root on a valuable planet. Each robot has a specific class and moveset, but players can use any weapon or loadout with any character -- and that's a huge benefit, because there are a ton of wacky guns, upgrades and ammo options in this game. For example, there are bouncing shotgun pellets, bullets that hover in place and then dive down when you press the trigger again, and a rocket launcher move that also makes you fly.
OpenAI Adds Shopping to ChatGPT
OpenAI announced today that users will soon be able to buy products through ChatGPT. The rollout of shopping buttons for AI-powered search queries will come to everyone, whether they are a signed-in user or not. Shoppers will not be able to check out inside of ChatGPT; instead they will be redirected to the merchant's website to finish the transaction. In a prelaunch demo for WIRED, Adam Fry, the ChatGPT search product lead at OpenAI, demonstrated how the updated user experience could be used to help people using the tool for product research decide which espresso machine or office chair to buy. The product recommendations shown to prospective shoppers are based on what ChatGPT remembers about a user's preferences as well as product reviews pulled from across the web.
A Philosopher Released an Acclaimed Book About Digital Manipulation. The Author Ended Up Being AI
When Italian philosopher and essayist Andrea Colamedici released Ipnocrazia: Trump, Musk e La Nuova Architettura Della Realtà (Hypnocracy: Trump, Musk, and the New Architecture of Reality), he wanted to make a statement about the existence of truth in the digital age. The book, published in December, was described as "a crucial book for understanding how control is currently exercised not by repressing truth but by multiplying narratives, making it impossible to locate any fixed point," according to a description by Tlon, a publishing house Colamedici cofounded. While the book attracted buzz in philosophy circles, Italian magazine L'Espresso revealed in April that the book's purported author, Jianwei Xun, did not exist, after one of its editors tried and failed to interview him. Initially described as a Hong Kong–born philosopher based in Berlin, it turned out that Xun was actually a hybrid human-algorithmic creation. Colamedici, listed on the book as translator, used AI to generate concepts and then critique those concepts.
Envisioning Recommendations on an LLM-Based Agent Platform
In recent years, large language model (LLM)–based agents have garnered widespread attention across various fields. Their impressive capabilities, such as natural language communication,21,23 instruction following,26,28 and task execution,22,38 have the potential to expand both the format of information carriers and the way in which information is exchanged. LLM-based agents can now evolve into domain experts, becoming novel information carriers with domain-specific knowledge.1,28 For example, a Travel Agent can retain travel-related information within its parameters. LLM-based agents are also showcasing a new form of information exchange, facilitating more intuitive and natural interactions with users through dialogue and task execution.24,34 Figure 1 shows an example of these capabilities, in which users engage in dialogue with a Travel Agent to obtain information and complete their travel plans.
In Pursuit of Professionalism
Robin K. Hill Is Computer Science a Profession? We computer scientists--many of us--like to think of ourselves as professionals, as do doctors and lawyers, and police officers, and accountants. But there are definitions of "profession," with criteria and expectations, that we fail to meet. Are we ready, collectively, to confront the criteria? Do we want to be card-carrying members of a learned institution of service?
Neuralink's third brain implant patient regains speech after being robbed of his voice by progressive disease - hear him speak in emotional video with help from Elon Musk's AI bot
An Arizona man has become the third person in the world to receive Neuralink's brain implant – letting him'speak' again in his own voice. Brad Smith has ALS, a progressive disease that makes him unable to move any part of his body, except his eyes and the corners of his mouth. The disease has robbed Mr Smith of his ability to speak, but the implant from Elon Musk's firm Neuralink has hooked up his brain to a computer. Around the size of five US quarters one on top of the other, the little chip lets the patient control the cursor on his MacBook Pro laptop to type. Then, Musk's Grok AI creates an accurate vocal clone, trained on vocal recordings of his actual voice before it was lost to the condition, to read the script.
Is our universe the ultimate computer? Scientist uncovers a major clue that we're all living in a simulation
For more than a quarter of a century since its release, 'The Matrix' has fueled modern fears that life is not all it seems. But according to a scientist, the classic movie's premise may not be completely science fiction. Melvin Vopson, an associate professor in physics at the University of Portsmouth, thinks gravity may be a sign that we're all living in a virtual simulation. Our universe is the'ultimate computer', Professor Vopson theorizes in a new paper. Gravity's pull – both on planet Earth and in outer space – is the universe trying to keep its vast amount of data organised, Professor Vopson claims.
The Download: China's manufacturers' viral moment, and how AI is changing creativity
Since the video was posted earlier this month, millions of TikTok users have watched as a young Chinese man in a blue T-shirt sits beside a traditional tea set and speaks directly to the camera in accented English: "Let's expose luxury's biggest secret." He stands and lifts what looks like an Hermès Birkin bag, one of the world's most exclusive and expensive handbags, before gesturing toward the shelves filled with more bags behind him. "You recognize them: Hermès, Louis Vuitton, Prada, Gucci--all crafted in our workshops." He ends by urging viewers to buy directly from his factory. Video "exposés" like this--where a sales agent breaks down the material cost of luxury goods, from handbags to perfumes to appliances--are everywhere on TikTok right now.