creepy
'I love you too!' My family's creepy, unsettling week with an AI toy
'Let's talk about something fun!' Grem the AI chatbot toy. 'Let's talk about something fun!' Grem the AI chatbot toy. 'I love you too!' My family's creepy, unsettling week with an AI toy The cuddly chatbot Grem is designed to'learn' your child's personality, while every conversation they have is recorded, then transcribed by a third party. It wasn't long before I wanted this experiment to be over ... 'I'm going to throw that thing into a river!" my wife says as she comes down the stairs looking frazzled after putting our four-year-old daughter to bed. To be clear, "that thing" is not our daughter, Emma*. It's Grem, an AI-powered stuffed alien toy that the musician Claire Boucher, better known as Grimes, helped develop with toy company Curio. Designed for kids aged three and over and built with OpenAI's technology, the toy is supposed to "learn" your child's personality and have fun, educational conversations with them. It's advertised as a healthier alternative to screen time and is ...
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'You're gonna find this creepy': my AI-cloned voice was used by the far right. Could I stop it? Georgina Findlay
My brother held his phone up to my ear. "You're gonna find this creepy," he warned. An Instagram reel showing a teenage boy at a rally featured a voiceover in the style of a news broadcast. A calm, female voice, with an almost imperceptible Mancunian accent, said: "The recent outcry from a British student has become a powerful symbol of a deepening crisis in the UK's educational system." I sat bolt upright, my eyes wide open.
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AI is going to listen to YOUR medical appointment! Health Secretary's new plan to free up doctors' time triggers outrage as critics slam 'creepy' idea and warn confidential medical info could end up in wrong hands
AI will listen in to doctors' appointments and automatically generate patient notes in a bid to improve productivity in the NHS. Health Secretary Victoria Atkins said the plans will cut the time medics spend on admin so they are free to see more patients. But privacy campaigners today described the move as'creepy', while patient groups warned people could come to harm as they will be too embarrassed to discuss medical issues freely while being recorded. Chancellor Jeremy Hunt yesterday announced a 3.4billion investment in NHS productivity through things such as expanding the use of AI, reducing paperwork for medics and improving access for patients. In a major keynote speech at the Nuffield Trust think tank's annual summit, Ms Atkins today said the'enormous amount of money' would be transformative.
Apple's latest Vision Pro update improves the look of 'Persona' avatars
A key feature of Apple's Vision Pro VR, er, spatial computing headset is Personas that that lets people see a digital version of themselves during calls, Zoom meetings, etc. At launch, they looked a bit creepy, but Apple has improved them considerably in the latest release, according to posts on X spotted by MacRumors. They're now more realistic, so users look less like impressionist paintings and more like humans. Once the visionOS 1.1 update is installed, you'll be prompted to recapture your Persona to get the "latest appearance updates" -- this is apparently done in part with the headset off and pointing at your face. Most users feel the updated Personas are better, and visually, they look less blurry and a touch more realistic, plus the proportions seem better.
Americans worry these 'creepy' deepfakes will manipulate people in 2024 election, 'disturbingly false'
Americans in Silicon Valley fear advanced artificial intelligence in campaign ads will influence and manipulate voters' decisions in the 2024 election. Americans in Silicon Valley are predicting advanced artificial intelligence could significantly influence and manipulate voters in the 2024 elections, with a potential for "disturbingly false" political advertising to push agendas. "I've seen some hilarious videos and some concerning ones where it's getting too realistic," Travis, of San Jose, said. As advanced artificial intelligence applications proliferate across industries, the rapidly evolving technology has raised concerns about its ability to manipulate elections, with some 2024 presidential campaigns already utilizing the tool. Former President Trump's presidential campaign, for example, triggered an uproar on X after using artificial intelligence to recreate Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis' 2024 presidential announcement with fictional guests, including billionaire Democratic donor George Soros, World Economic Forum Chair Klaus Schwab, former Vice President Dick Cheney, Adolf Hitler, the devil and the FBI.
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Adams says NYPD's robotic K9 'out of the pound' as department revives 'creepy' device
Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com. New York City officials unveiled three new high-tech policing devices Tuesday, including a robotic dog that critics called creepy when it first joined the police pack 2 1/2 years ago. The new devices, which also include a GPS tracker for stolen cars and a cone-shaped security robot, will be rolled out in a manner that is "transparent, consistent and always done in close collaboration with the people we serve," said police Commissioner Keechant Sewell, who joined Mayor Eric Adams and other officials at a Times Square press conference where the security robot and the mechanical canine nicknamed Digidog were displayed. "Digidog is out of the pound," said Adams, a Democrat and former police officer.
Why Do A.I. Chatbots Tell Lies and Act Weird? Look in the Mirror. - The New York Times
As it analyzes that sea of good and bad information from across the internet, an L.L.M. learns to do one particular thing: guess the next word in a sequence of words. It operates like a giant version of the autocomplete technology that suggests the next word as you type out an email or an instant message on your smartphone. Given the sequence "Tom Cruise is a ____," it might guess "actor." When you chat with a chatbot, the bot is not just drawing on everything it has learned from the internet. It is drawing on everything you have said to it and everything it has said back.
Machines of Loving Understanding « Pete Warden's blog
It's a reminder of how creepy a world full of devices that blur the line between life and objects could be, but there's also something appealing about connecting more closely to the things we build. Far more insightful people than me have explored these issues, from Mary Shelley to Phillip K. Dick, but the aspect that has fascinated me most is how computers understand us. We live in a world where our machines are wonderful at showing us near-photorealistic scenes in real time, and can even talk to us in convincing voices. Up until recently though, they've not been able to make sense of images or audio that are given to them as inputs. We've been able to synthesize voices for decades, but speech recognition has only really started working well in the last few years.
"It's Not Possible for Me to Feel or Be Creepy": An Interview with ChatGPT
Between Christmas and New Year's, my family took a six-hour drive to Vermont. I drove; my wife and two children sat in the back seat. Our children are five and two--too old to be hypnotized by a rattle or a fidget spinner, too young to entertain themselves--so a six-hour drive amounted to an hour of napping, an hour of free association and sing-alongs, and four hours of desperation. We offered the kids an episode of their favorite storytelling podcast, but they weren't in the mood for something prerecorded. They wanted us to invent a new story, on the spot, tailored to their interests.
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Meta's 'Make-A-Video' AI system generates videos from TEXT prompts
Meta debuted a new type of art-generating AI that can create videos from nothing but text prompts - with results that are creepy, surreal and impressive. The artificial intelligence system announced on Thursday, called Make-A-Video, uses existing images with captions to learn about the world and how it's described and uses unlabeled videos to determine how the world moves. The resulting videos run the gamut from surreal to stylized and creepy to convincing. Mark Zuckerberg's company has not announced when the system may become available to the public or whether there will be any restrictions - but there's a sign-up form that people can fill out if they want to test Make-A-Video in the future. Advances in using AI to create videos on demand poses all sorts of ethical dilemmas - not to mention the possibility for deepfakes and disinformation.