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New AI voice and video tools can look and sound like you. WSJ’s Joanna Stern replaced herself with her AI twin for the day to find out. Photo illustration: Elena ScottiWASHINGTON—The chief executive of ChatGPT creator OpenAI called on Congress to create licensing and safety standards for advanced artificial intelligence systems, as lawmakers begin a bipartisan push toward regulating the powerful new artificial-intelligence tools available to consumers. “We understand that people are anxious about how it can change the way we live,” Sam Altman said of AI technology at a Senate subcommittee hearing Tuesday, his first appearance before Congress. “But we believe that we can and must work together to identify and manage the potential downsides so that we can all enjoy the tremendous upsides.”
Your AI Clone Can Fool Family, Your Bank, But Not Your Video MeetingYou can pay companies to create video and audio versions of yourself using generative artificial intelligence. But how well does it work? WSJ senior personal tech columnist Joanna Stern joins host Zoe Thomas to explain what it was like to work with her AI clone, and why it has her worried. Illustration: Amogh Alva Vaz/WSJ
Your AI Clone Can Fool Family, Your Bank, But Not Your Video MeetingYou can pay companies to create video and audio versions of yourself using generative artificial intelligence. But how well does it work? WSJ senior personal tech columnist Joanna Stern joins host Zoe Thomas to explain what it was like to work with her AI clone, and why it has her worried. Illustration: Amogh Alva Vaz/WSJ
Elon Musk Names Linda Yaccarino as Twitter CEO
  + stars: | 2023-05-12 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Your AI Clone Can Fool Family, Your Bank, But Not Your Video MeetingYou can pay companies to create video and audio versions of yourself using generative artificial intelligence. But how well does it work? WSJ senior personal tech columnist Joanna Stern joins host Zoe Thomas to explain what it was like to work with her AI clone, and why it has her worried. Illustration: Amogh Alva Vaz/WSJ
Google’s new AI chatbot Bard is more restricted than OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Bing. Google’s Sissie Hsiao discusses it all with WSJ’s Joanna Stern. Photo illustration: Preston Jessee for The Wall Street JournalGoogle unveiled conversational features for its search engine and made its chatbot Bard widely available for English speakers, a show of force as it races Microsoft and a growing number of startups to win over consumers with artificial-intelligence products. Calling the moment a new era in search, Google introduced a set of features—called Search Generative Experience—that use AI programs to provide lengthier summaries in response to a range of queries. The features invite follow-up questions, opening a new interface allowing users to hold conversations with the search engine.
'We're Back': Tucker Carlson to Launch Show on Twitter
  + stars: | 2023-05-10 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Your AI Clone Can Fool Family, Your Bank, But Not Your Video MeetingYou can pay companies to create video and audio versions of yourself using generative artificial intelligence. But how well does it work? WSJ senior personal tech columnist Joanna Stern joins host Zoe Thomas to explain what it was like to work with her AI clone, and why it has her worried. Illustration: Amogh Alva Vaz/WSJ
New AI voice and video tools can look and sound like you. WSJ’s Joanna Stern replaced herself with her AI twin for the day to find out. Photo illustration: Elena ScottiKIGALI, Rwanda—Amid growing talk of the promise and peril of artificial intelligence, more than 2,000 researchers and engineers from around the world gathered in Rwanda this week to debate contrasting visions for the technology’s future. One vision is to build ever-more-powerful systems such as ChatGPT that aim to exceed human intelligence to boost worker productivity and economic growth. The other is to create more-targeted, small-scale AI solutions to local and global challenges, including tackling climate change, improving healthcare and preserving biodiversity.
Google’s new AI chatbot Bard is more restricted than OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Bing. Google’s Sissie Hsiao discusses it all with WSJ’s Joanna Stern in an exclusive interview. Photo illustration: Preston Jessee for The Wall Street JournalGoogle is shifting the way it presents search results to incorporate conversations with artificial intelligence, along with more short video and social-media posts, a departure from the list of website results that has made it the dominant search engine for decades. The changes represent a response to big shifts in the way people access information on the internet, including the emergence of AI bots like ChatGPT. They would nudge the service further away from its traditional format, known informally as the “10 blue links,” according to company documents and people familiar with the matter.
New AI voice and video tools can look and sound like you. But can they fool your family—or bank? WSJ’s Joanna Stern replaced herself with her AI twin for the day to find out. Photo illustration: Elena ScottiWASHINGTON—The Biden administration is confronting the rapidly expanding use of artificial intelligence, warning of the dangers the technology poses to public safety, privacy and democracy while having limited authority to regulate it. Vice President Kamala Harris, who met Thursday with the chief executives of leading AI companies Google, Microsoft , OpenAI and Anthropic, said the technology “has the potential to dramatically increase threats to safety and security, infringe civil rights and privacy, and erode public trust and faith in democracy.”
Watch: Russia, Ukraine Delegates Fight at Turkey Conference
  + stars: | 2023-05-05 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Your AI Clone Can Fool Family, Your Bank, But Not Your Video MeetingYou can pay companies to create video and audio versions of yourself using generative artificial intelligence. But how well does it work? WSJ senior personal tech columnist Joanna Stern joins host Zoe Thomas to explain what it was like to work with her AI clone, and why it has her worried. Illustration: Amogh Alva Vaz/WSJ
Your AI Clone Can Fool Family, Your Bank, But Not Your Video MeetingYou can pay companies to create video and audio versions of yourself using generative artificial intelligence. But how well does it work? WSJ senior personal tech columnist Joanna Stern joins host Zoe Thomas to explain what it was like to work with her AI clone, and why it has her worried. Illustration: Amogh Alva Vaz/WSJ
Second Mass Shooting in Two Days Leaves Eight Dead in Serbia
  + stars: | 2023-05-05 | by ( ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Your AI Clone Can Fool Family, Your Bank, But Not Your Video MeetingYou can pay companies to create video and audio versions of yourself using generative artificial intelligence. But how well does it work? WSJ senior personal tech columnist Joanna Stern joins host Zoe Thomas to explain what it was like to work with her AI clone, and why it has her worried. Illustration: Amogh Alva Vaz/WSJ
New AI voice and video tools can look and sound like you. WSJ’s Joanna Stern replaced herself with her AI twin for the day to find out. Photo illustration: Elena ScottiShares of Chegg were cut nearly in half after the company, which offers tools to help students with homework, said ChatGPT is eating into its growth. The stock fell almost 46% to $9.54 a share in morning trading, on pace for its lowest close since 2017. Shares of virtual language-learning company Duolingo fell 9% while American depositary receipts tied to shares of London-based Pearson fell 12.5%.
ChatGPT Ban Lifted in Italy After Data-Privacy Concessions
  + stars: | 2023-04-29 | by ( Sam Schechner | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Microsoft is combining the tech behind OpenAI’s ChatGPT with its Bing search engine. In an interview, WSJ’s Joanna Stern spoke with Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella about the new tools and how AI is going to change search. Photo illustration: Preston Jessee for The Wall Street JournalItaly’s privacy regulator rescinded its temporary ban on ChatGPT after the chatbot’s developer, OpenAI, implemented changes demanded by the regulator, the latest twist in the complex regulatory response to new artificial-intelligence technology. Italy’s ban was one of the first nationwide measures restricting the use of ChatGPT since it exploded globally in popularity in recent months. The Italian Data Protection Authority ordered the ban late last month, saying that OpenAI had “no legal basis” for using the data it had amassed about Italian residents to train its algorithms and that it was too easy for children to access.
S2 E22Inside the Lucrative–and Secretive–Business of iPhone Trade-Ins So you just traded in your old iPhone to get a deal on a new one. Where does that old phone go? Who makes money on it? WSJ’s Joanna Stern follows an iPhone through the refurbishment process to explain why the second-hand phone market is booming. Photo illustration: Kenny Wassus
I Cloned Myself With AI. She Fooled My Bank and My Family.
  + stars: | 2023-04-28 | by ( Joanna Stern | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Photo illustration: Elena ScottiThe good news about AI Joanna: She never loses her voice, she has outstanding posture and not even a convertible driving 120 mph through a tornado could mess up her hair. The bad news: She can fool my family and trick my bank.
Greg Frasca has been locked out of his Apple account since October, and he’ll do just about anything to get back in. He has offered to fly from Florida to Apple’s California headquarters to prove his identity in person, or write a check for $10,000 to reclaim the account. It holds the only copies of eight years of photos of his young daughters.
S2 E22Inside the Lucrative–and Secretive–Business of iPhone Trade-Ins So you just traded in your old iPhone to get a deal on a new one. Where does that old phone go? Who makes money on it? WSJ’s Joanna Stern follows an iPhone through the refurbishment process to explain why the second-hand phone market is booming. Photo illustration: Kenny Wassus
In this videoShare Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailApple moving production from China to India remains 'vital,' says WSJ's Joanna SternJoanna Stern, WSJ senior personal technology columnist, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss Apple's strategy in India, the drop in Mac deliveries and more.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCan Elon create everything? Musk aims to turn Twitter into 'everything' appHosted by Brian Sullivan, “Last Call” is a fast-paced, entertaining business show that explores the intersection of money, culture and policy. Tune in Monday through Friday at 7 p.m. ET on CNBC. Joanna Stern, Wall Street Journal personal technology columnist, and Americus Reed, professor at Wharton School of Business, join the show to discuss Elon Musk's attempt to turn Twitter into an 'everything' app.
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailHow potential TikTok ban could benefit other social media giants like Meta and TwitterJoanna Stern, Wall Street Journal senior personal technology columnist, joins 'Squawk on the Street' to discuss who will be the winners if the ban on TikTok really happens.
Google Made the Bard AI Chatbot Boring. On Purpose.
  + stars: | 2023-03-24 | by ( Joanna Stern | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
If ChatGPT is your crazy Uncle Leo, Google’s Bard is your goodie-two-shoes Aunt Martha. On Tuesday, Alphabet Inc.’s Google released its artificial-intelligence chatbot contender, an answer to OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft Corp.’s Bing chatbot, which uses OpenAI technology. As with those others, you type a prompt into Bard and out pops prose that’s likely better than your last texting convo. It can answer questions, draft emails and tell you a bedtime story. Yes, it can even write a newspaper column.
S2 E22Inside the Lucrative–and Secretive–Business of iPhone Trade-Ins So you just traded in your old iPhone to get a deal on a new one. Where does that old phone go? Who makes money on it? WSJ’s Joanna Stern follows an iPhone through the refurbishment process to explain why the second-hand phone market is booming. Photo illustration: Kenny Wassus
Why Apple and the Carriers Want Your Old iPhone
  + stars: | 2023-03-15 | by ( Joanna Stern | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Cellular carrier: Trade in your old phone and we’ll give you a free brand spankin’ new iPhone 14! You: Really? Pretty sure there’s a booger in my iPhone 11’s charging port.
S2 E21Apple’s iPhone Passcode Problem: How Thieves Can Take Over in Minutes iPhone thieves across the country are locking people out of their Apple accounts and draining their bank accounts—sometimes before victims even know what happened. How do they do it and how can you protect yourself? WSJ’s Joanna Stern investigates. Photo illustration: Elena Scotti, Kenny Wassus
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