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Artificial Intelligence Just Had Its Very Own "iPhone Moment"

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Editor's note: "Artificial Intelligence Just Had Its Very Own'iPhone Moment'" was previously published in January 2023. It has since been updated to include the most relevant information available. Three months ago, the world changed forever. And if you're able to embrace it, you could put yourself in a position to make fortunes over the next decade as the biggest technological revolution since the internet sweeps across America. Specifically, on Nov. 30, 2022, small tech startup OpenAI launched a brand-new conversational chatbot – ChatGPT.


Did Artificial Intelligence Just Get Too Smart?

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Released by OpenAI, a San Francisco-based company, ChatGPT can write essays, come up with scripts for TV shows, answer math questions and even write code. ChatGPT has inspired awe, fear, stunts and attempts to circumvent its guardrails. The chatbot is suddenly everywhere. Who should decide how it's built? And what could go right?


The Daily: Did Artificial Intelligence Just Get Too Smart? on Apple Podcasts

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This episode contains strong language.In the past few weeks, a major breakthrough in the world of artificial intelligence -- ChatGPT -- has put extraordinary powers in the hands of anyone with access to the internet. Released by OpenAI, a San Francisco-based company, ChatGPT can write essays, come up with scripts for TV shows, answer math questions and even write code.


Did Artificial Intelligence Just Get Too Smart? - The New York Times

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The Daily is made by Lisa Tobin, Rachel Quester, Lynsea Garrison, Clare Toeniskoetter, Paige Cowett, Michael Simon Johnson, Brad Fisher, Chris Wood, Jessica Cheung, Stella Tan, Alexandra Leigh Young, Lisa Chow, Eric Krupke, Marc Georges, Luke Vander Ploeg, M.J. Davis Lin, Dan Powell, Dave Shaw, Sydney Harper, Robert Jimison, Mike Benoist, Liz O. Baylen, Asthaa Chaturvedi, Rachelle Bonja, Diana Nguyen, Marion Lozano, Corey Schreppel, Anita Badejo, Rob Szypko, Elisheba Ittoop, Chelsea Daniel, Mooj Zadie, Patricia Willens, Rowan Niemisto, Jody Becker, Rikki Novetsky, John Ketchum, Nina Feldman, Will Reid, Carlos Prieto, Sofia Milan, Ben Calhoun and Susan Lee. Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsverk of Wonderly.


Artificial intelligence just located new craters on Mars in 5 seconds

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One way researchers discover "new" craters on Mars is to analyze images taken from NASA satellites that are pointed at the surface of the Red Planet. Researchers will look at a collection of images spanning over various time frames, then compare images of the surface to each other. If a new crater appears between an image taken on A date and an image taken B date, then researchers can estimate that an impact must have occurred sometime between the dates of the images taken. To analyze one image, a researcher will spend about 40 minutes. As humans tend to do, we have offloaded the process to technology that can complete the task much more efficiently, freeing up time for researchers to work on other tasks.


Is Artificial Intelligence Just Another High Performance Computing Workload?

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Artificial intelligence (AI) comes to our minds whenever organizations are seeking new, innovative approaches to enhance and expand their businesses. Typical attributes for such workloads are "use case centric", "data scientist specific", and "innovative". Some examples include autonomous farming, self-driving cars, or interactive voice dialog systems. On the other hand, high performance computing (HPC) is often seen as highly specialized and expansive, serving a wide range of custom-written applications by research engineers, or some of the major industry HPC software stacks like fluid dynamics modelling or crash simulations. For many years now, both disciplines have been treated separately, developing their own ecosystem of specialized hardware, software stacks, and operational models.


Researchers unveil new tool to pinpoint unnatural movements that helps suss out deepfakes

Daily Mail - Science & tech

The fight against videos altered by the use of artificial intelligence just got a new ally. According to researchers at UC Berkeley and the University of Southern California, a new algorithm can help spot whether a video has been manipulated via a process known as'deepfaking.' Counter-intuitively, the tool that scientists say will aid them in their crusade against faked videos happens to be the very same tool that helps make the videos in the first place: artificial intelligence. The fight against videos altered by the use of artificial intelligence just got a new ally. Pictured is a grab from a deep fake video where Steve Buscemi's face is superimposed over Jennifer Lawrence's body Deepfakes are so named because they utilize deep learning, a form of artificial intelligence, to create fake videos.


Evolving Government: An artificial intelligence just for English - Fedscoop

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A set of decades-old algorithms has finally met with adequate data and computing power. Organizations around the world are using this artificial intelligence to make better decisions; government agencies are not far behind either. AI has shown with tremendous potential and unbelievable promise. It is but natural that AI be applied to automate workflows based on something each citizen uses everyday -- language. Majors companies like IBM, Amazon and Microsoft, as well as upstarts like ours, Coseer, are investing in AI for language. The obvious course is to start with algorithms that have been so successful elsewhere.

  Industry: Government (1.00)

Artificial intelligence just helped NASA find our solar system's mini-me

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Further blurring the lines between science and science-fiction, an artificial intelligence system leveraged by NASA has discovered two previously unknown exoplanets. One of the new exoplanets, a sizzling rocky world called Kepler-90i, is significant because it brings the known planets orbiting its star to eight, and it's the first time a numerical twin to our solar system has ever been detected. "The Kepler-90 star system is like a mini version of our solar system," Andrew Vanderburg, a NASA Sagan Postdoctoral Fellow and astronomer at the University of Texas at Austin, said in a statement. "You have small planets inside and big planets outside, but everything is scrunched in much closer." Kepler-90 is a sun-like star, but all of its eight planets are scrunched into the equivalent distance of Earth to the sun.


Artificial intelligence just discovered two new exoplanets

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A machine learning technique called a neural network has identified two new exoplanets in our galaxy, NASA scientists and a Google software engineer announced today, meaning that researchers now know about two new worlds thanks to the power of artificial intelligence. Discovering new exoplanets--as planets outside our solar system are called--is a relatively common occurrence, and a key instrument that scientists use to identify them is the Kepler Space Telescope, which has already spotted a confirmed 2,525 exoplanets. But what's novel about this announcement is that researchers used a AI system to spot these two new worlds, now dubbed Kepler-90i and Kepler-80g. The planet known as 90i is especially interesting to astronomers, as it brings the total number of known planets orbiting that star to eight, a tie with our own system. The average temperature on 90i is thought to be quite balmy: more than 800 degrees Fahrenheit.