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Warning! Meta will start snooping on your AI chats in its apps in December

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Meta will start snooping on your AI chats in its apps in December WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram are affected. The policy rolls out starting December 16th, though the EU and UK are exempt for now. In the near future, according to a recent news release, Meta wants to systematically save and analyze its users' conversations with the company's own AI chatbot on WhatsApp, Instagram, and Facebook. The initiative will begin starting December 16th, 2025, initially outside the EU and UK where stricter data protection laws will force a later introduction.


DuckDuckGo dips Into the AI chatbot pond

Engadget

This one, called AI Chat, comes courtesy of DuckDuckGo, the privacy-focused search engine that obviously doesn't want to feel left behind in the AI arms race. The company has been testing AI Chat over the last few months, but as of today, it's available to everyone. Unlike other standalone bots like Google's Gemini and OpenAI's ChatGPT that are powered by their own large language models, DuckDuckGo's AI Chat is not. Instead, think of it as a way to access multiple chatbots in a single place. Right now, AI chat will let you choose between OpenAI's GPT 3.5, Anthropic's Claude 3 Haiku, Meta's Llama 3 and Mistral's Mistral 8x7B, and the company says that more models are coming soon.


Elon Musk's AI chat with Rishi Sunak: Everything you need to know

New Scientist

In an event following the UK's AI Safety Summit, entrepreneur Elon Musk spoke with UK prime minister Rishi Sunak about future AIs most likely being "a force for good" and someday enabling a "future of abundance". That utopian narrative about a future superhuman AI โ€“ one that Musk claims would eliminate the need for human work and even provide meaningful companionship โ€“ shaped much of the conversation between the pair. But their conversation's focus on an "age of abundance" glossed over the current negative impacts and controversies surrounding the tech industry's race to develop large AI models โ€“ and did not get into specifics on how governments should regulate AI and address real-world risks. "I think we are seeing the most disruptive force in history here, where we will have for the first time something that is smarter than the smartest human," said Musk. "There will come a point when no job is needed โ€“ you can have a job if you want for personal satisfaction, but the AI will be able to do everything." Musk also acknowledged his longstanding position of frequently warning about the existential risks that superhuman AI could pose to humanity in the future.


What will Elon Musk and Rishi Sunak talk about in their AI chat?

New Scientist

The UK's AI Safety Summit closes today, with UK prime minister Rishi Sunak convening a small group of world and business leaders to discuss the risks of AI. But perhaps the most surprising development is a conversation due to take place this evening between Sunak and entrepreneur Elon Musk. Full details of the event are still unclear, but it will be broadcast on X, Musk's social media platform, on a delay. The conversation is scheduled to last 45 minutes and will reportedly be moderated by an unknown individual, with some audience members, including tech executives and journalists, invited to ask questions. Politico reports that the UK government has said that the conversation won't be edited before broadcast.


How does AI chat change search behaviors?

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Generative AI tools such as chatGPT are poised to change the way people engage with online information. Recently, Microsoft announced their "new Bing" search system which incorporates chat and generative AI technology from OpenAI. Google has announced plans to deploy search interfaces that incorporate similar types of technology. These new technologies will transform how people can search for information. The research presented here is an early investigation into how people make use of a generative AI chat system (referred to simply as chat from here on) as part of a search process, and how the incorporation of chat systems with existing search tools may effect users search behaviors and strategies. We report on an exploratory user study with 10 participants who used a combined Chat+Search system that utilized the OpenAI GPT-3.5 API and the Bing Web Search v5 API. Participants completed three search tasks. In this pre-print paper of preliminary results, we report on ways that users integrated AI chat into their search process, things they liked and disliked about the chat system, their trust in the chat responses, and their mental models of how the chat system generated responses.


Microsoft puts AI in the heart of Windows 11 with Windows Copilot

Engadget

Unlike Meta, Microsoft doesn't need to change its name to prove it's committed to an entirely new tech platform: It's doing so through action. After debuting its AI-infused Bing search engine earlier this year, the company unveiled the Microsoft 365 Copilot for Office apps. And even before those consumer reveals, Microsoft delivered an AI tool for developers in 2021 with GitHub Copilot. Today at its Build developer conference, Microsoft is making the inevitable next step: It's making AI an integral part of Windows 11. The new Windows Copilot tool lives in the Windows sidebar and, just like Bing's AI chat, you can use it as a super-powered search engine by typing in general questions. But true to its name, it's also deeply integrated with Windows.


Microsoft opens Bing AI for public testing, no waitlist required

Engadget

Bing AI is now open to all--sort of. Three months after debuting its revamped search engine, Microsoft has announced that it's now moving into open preview. You'll still need to sign into Bing on the Edge browser (or the Bing mobile apps) to use the chatbot, but at least you no longer have to deal with a waitlist. As if to celebrate this new phase of Bing (powered by OpenAI's GPT-4), Microsoft is also rolling out several new features. For one, it can go beyond mere text responses to deliver charts, graphs and rich formatting.


5 brilliant ChatGPT apps for your phone that you should try right now

#artificialintelligence

Whether or not we're still talking about ChatGPT in a year remains to be seen, but right now, the generative AI chatbot is all the rage. You've probably already used ChatGPT on OpenAI's website, but did you know that you can bring ChatGPT with you anywhere you go? Ever since ChatGPT launched last November, developers have been incorporating the AI into their apps. Here are five of the best ChatGPT iOS apps currently on the App Store. One of our favorite conversational AI apps is Perplexity.


Microsoft brings DALL-E's AI image generation to Bing and Edge

Engadget

Microsoft's Bing AI chat can already be helpful for finding answers, but now it can help you produce fanciful pictures. The company has introduced a Bing Image Creator preview that adds OpenAI's DALL-E AI image generation to both Bing search and a sidebar in the Edge browser. You just have to ask the chatbot to create an image with either a direct description or a follow-up to a previous query. If you're wondering how to revamp your living room, you can ask Bing to draw some ideas based on your criteria. Yes, Microsoft is aware of the potential for things to go awry.


As Google weighs in on ChatGPT, You.com enters the AI chat

#artificialintelligence

Check out all the on-demand sessions from the Intelligent Security Summit here. One of the biggest topics underlying the hype bonanza since OpenAI's release of ChatGPT two weeks ago has been: What does this mean for Google search? But it was only on Tuesday evening that Google appeared to finally weigh in on the topic: CNBC reported that employees raised concerns at a recent all-hands meeting that the company was losing its competitive edge in artificial intelligence (AI) given ChatGPT's quick rise. "Is this a missed opportunity for Google, considering we've had Lamda for a while?" read one top-rated question. Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai and Jeff Dean, the long-time head of Google's AI division, responded to the question by saying that the company has similar capabilities in its LaMDA model, but that Google has more "reputational risk" in providing wrong information and therefore is moving "more conservatively than a small startup."