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Minecraft fan may be most committed hobbyist out there

New Scientist

Feedback comes across a YouTuber's efforts to build a large language model in Minecraft and is impressed at the scale of it - even if it doesn't quite live up to its promise to blow your mind in spectacular fashion There are few things Feedback appreciates more than a truly committed hobbyist: someone who happily spends months or even years building something that is of no practical use whatsoever, just to be able to look at it or play with it. For those who might be unfamiliar, Minecraft is an open-world game in which everything is made up of cubical blocks. Players dig into the ground to collect cubes of useful minerals, which they can use to build things. For instance, they might build a house so that the monsters that come out at night can't get them. Or they might go big.


MrBeast says AI advance is scary for YouTube creators

BBC News

MrBeast: AI means it's'scary times' for YouTube creators The world's biggest YouTuber, MrBeast, says the rapid advance of generative artificial intelligence (AI) is scary for the millions of creators currently making content for a living. AI tools that can create fully-formed videos from simple text prompts by users have made rapid advances in recent years. On social media, MrBeast, real name Jimmy Donaldson, asked what would happen to people like him when AI videos are just as good as normal videos. Fears about the impact AI will have on the jobs market are widespread - but particularly acute in the creative industries. In the film and video game industries, there has been extensive industrial action over the use of AI.


YouTube's Sneaky AI 'Experiment'

The Atlantic - Technology

Something strange has been happening on YouTube over the past few weeks. After being uploaded, some videos have been subtly augmented, their appearance changing without their creators doing anything. Viewers have noticed "extra punchy shadows," "weirdly sharp edges," and a smoothed-out look to footage that makes it look "like plastic." Many people have come to the same conclusion: YouTube is using AI to tweak videos on its platform, without creators' knowledge. A multimedia artist going by the name Mr. Bravo, whose YouTube videos feature "an authentic 80s aesthetic" achieved by running his videos through a VCR, wrote on Reddit that his videos look "completely different to what was originally uploaded."


YouTubers are being scammed with AI-generated deepfake videos

PCWorld

Phishing is a favorite tactic of scammers because so many people fall for it. There are many types of phishing scams, but one of the more recent takes is deepfake phishing, in which scammers use convincing AI-generated videos of people you know (e.g., your boss) to get you to give up sensitive information or send money over. YouTube recently issued a warning that scammers are spreading AI-generated deepfake videos to Creators, claiming there's been a change in the site's monetization policy. One such video impersonates YouTube CEO Neal Mohan, who appears to be announcing those changes. Scammers are also allegedly sending emails asking recipients to click on a link to "confirm" these updated YouTube Partner Program terms and conditions.


YouTubers are selling their unused video footage to AI companies

The Japan Times

YouTubers and other digital content creators are selling their unused video footage to artificial intelligence companies seeking exclusive videos to better train their AI algorithms, often netting thousands of dollars per deal. OpenAI, Alphabet's Google, AI media company Moonvalley and several other AI companies are collectively paying hundreds of content creators for access to their unpublished videos, according to people familiar with the negotiations. That content, which hasn't been posted elsewhere online, is considered valuable for training artificial intelligence systems since it's unique. AI companies are currently paying between 1 and 4 per minute of footage, the people said, with prices increasing depending on video quality or format. Videos that are shot in 4K, for example, go for a higher price, as does non-traditional footage like videos captured from drones or using 3D animations.


This Startup Wants YouTube Creators to Get Paid for AI Training Data

WIRED

So far, when AI companies have trained on YouTube's invaluable stash of videos, captions, and other content, they've done so without permission. An AI-focused content licensing startup called Calliope Networks is hoping to change that with its new "License to Scrape," a program aimed directly at YouTube stars. "There's obvious demand from AI companies to scrape YouTube content. We see that by their actions. So what we're trying to do is to create a tool that makes it legal and simple for them," says Calliope Networks CEO Dave Davis.


A Preliminary Exploration of YouTubers' Use of Generative-AI in Content Creation

Lyu, Yao, Zhang, He, Niu, Shuo, Cai, Jie

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Content creators increasingly utilize generative artificial intelligence (Gen-AI) on platforms such as YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, and various blogging sites to produce imaginative images, AI-generated videos, and articles using Large Language Models (LLMs). Despite its growing popularity, there remains an underexplored area concerning the specific domains where AI-generated content is being applied, and the methodologies content creators employ with Gen-AI tools during the creation process. This study initially explores this emerging area through a qualitative analysis of 68 YouTube videos demonstrating Gen-AI usage. Our research focuses on identifying the content domains, the variety of tools used, the activities performed, and the nature of the final products generated by Gen-AI in the context of user-generated content.


'Magic: The Gathering' publisher Wizards of the Coast sent the Pinkertons after a leaker

Engadget

When a highly anticipated set of Magic: The Gathering cards leaked on YouTube last week, it's hard to imagine anyone would have guessed the incident would end with the involvement of one of the most infamous private security firms in the world. But that's exactly what happened after YouTuber Oldschoolmtg uploaded an unboxing video featuring a collection of March of the Machine: The Aftermath booster packs. If you're not familiar, Aftermath is an upcoming 50-card Magic: The Gathering set Wizards of the Coast will release on May 12th. It's billed as a supplement to the game's current March of the Machine expansion, which has been available since April 21st. Predictably, Oldschoolmtg's unboxing video was all anyone in the Magic: The Gathering community could talk about in recent days.


Watch how ChatGPT is tricked into generating Windows 95 keys

PCWorld

ChatGPT and other AI chatbots seem a little bit like magic sometimes. But they're not, especially when asked to do a fairly basic computational task that you'd think they could handle with relative ease--like generate a Windows 95 license key. From our AI shootout of ChatGPT versus Microsoft Bing versus Google Bard, we know that AI chatbots can outperform our expectations on some tasks, and surprisingly struggle with others. Enderman, a YouTuber who typically plays around with various older Windows builds, set out to see if they could generate a brand-new Windows 95 key. The obvious method is to simply ask ChatGPT to generate the requisite license keys, but OpenAI made its chatbot too ethical for that.


AI detects if YouTubers are infected with omicron coronavirus variant

New Scientist

An artificial intelligence can detect if YouTubers are infected with the omicron coronavirus variant with up to 80 per cent accuracy. Although vocal changes aren't considered a key symptom of any coronavirus infection, the researchers behind the AI argue their results suggest a subtle "Omicron-specific laryngitis".