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Stars from Hollywood's golden age are being reborn through celebrity estate AI voice cloning deals, a sign of how some of the "Wild West" concerns about unauthorized AI impersonation are being addressed by new business models. Safeguards include active moderation of content, accountability enforceable with bans, and special provisions for safeguarding the impact of AI voice on the 2024 election. Among the current generation of actors, there remains significant anxiety surrounding the use of AI in generating voice content. Voice actors for video games have raised concerns, and last year's film and television strike had significant roots in anxieties over the use of AI. AI voice licensing could alleviate workload for voice actors, he added, without supplanting them, as they "intercede in the process by focusing on offering correction or enhancement to ineffable aspects such as intonation, warmth, and emphasis, which still present challenges."
Persons: Burt Reynolds, Andreessen Horowitz, Judy Garland, James Dean, Sir Laurence Olivier, ElevenLabs, Sam Sklar, Scarlett Johansson, " Sklar, Frito, Tom Waits soundalike, Waits, Lovo, Steve Cohen, Pollock, Cohen, Bette Davis, Sklar, Nauman Dawalatabad, Dawalatabad, Michele Cobb Organizations: Golden Globe, Beverly Hilton Hotel, Sequoia, New York Times, Washington Post, Disney, Google, Apple, MIT Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence, Audio Publishers Association, CNBC
Despite companies' high expectations for productivity gains from generative AI technology, workers are finding far different results when those tools are added to their jobs. Nearly all of C-suite leaders — 96% — polled in an Upwork Research Institute study in July said they expect the use of gen AI tools to increase their company's overall productivity levels. More than 75% of employees said gen AI tools have even decreased their productivity and added to their workload. Meanwhile, companies are also increasing their spending on new AI tools. Finding a better way of matching executive expectations and worker outcomes is critical if companies want investments in generative AI to pay off.
Persons: Joe Atkinson, Atkinson Organizations: Research, CNBC Technology, PwC
The artificial intelligence startup and Menlo Ventures are launching a $100 million fund on Wednesday to back early-stage startups, and get them using the AI company's technology. It initially started with $100 million in 2008, and doubled to $200 million two years later. Venture capitalists are now looking for ways to sweeten their offers to court AI startups, as investors swarm to the hottest deals. Funding for AI startups more than doubled in the second quarter from the first, topping $24 billion, according to data from Crunchbase. OpenAI has its own venture fund, the OpenAI Startup Fund, which its website says is "investing $175 million to help AI companies have a profound, positive impact on the world."
Persons: Anthropic, Kleiner Perkins, Matt Murphy, Murphy, Daniela Amodei, Dario, OpenAI, ChatGPT Organizations: Menlo Ventures, Menlo, Apple, CNBC, Venture, OpenAI, Fund Locations: Crunchbase
NEW YORK, NEW YORK - NOVEMBER 08: Alex Cooper (C) performs a wedding ceremony during "The Unwell Tour" at The Theater at Madison Square Garden on November 08, 2023 in New York City. (Photo by Gotham/Getty Images)Kim Kardashian's shapewear label Skims has tapped podcaster Alex Cooper to showcase the brand's latest wedding-themed collection. Kardashian said in a press release that Skims "wanted to announce the Wedding Shop with a real bride-to-be." The bride-to-be has been documenting her own journey in wedding planning — both the highs and lows — across her social media accounts and on her podcast. The network is a subsidiary of Cooper's Trending media venture.
Persons: Alex Cooper, Kim Kardashian's, Cooper, Matt Kaplan, Kardashian, , Kaplan, influencers, Jens Grede, Skims Organizations: NEW, Madison, Garden, Gotham, Spotify, Gen, Entertainment, Skims, WNBA, NBA, USA, New York Times, Bloomberg Locations: New York City
Gorodenkoff | Istock | Getty ImagesHigh-paying hybrid work is here to stay — or is it? Six-figure hybrid job availability crashed nearly 70% while posts for in-person jobs nearly doubled, according to the Q4 2023 High Paying Jobs report from jobs platform Ladders. Higher income also made workers more likely to start looking for a new position that offers hybrid flexibility, the report states. This disconnect between what employers are offering and what highly paid workers want is causing tension in the return-to-office dance. 'The tragedy of the commons'In the case for hybrid, how are six-figure workers with executive or managerial roles different from individual employees?
Persons: Frank Weishaupt, , they're, Rick Smith, Johns, Smith Organizations: Istock, Getty, Owl Labs, Employers, Boeing, UPS, Johns Hopkins Carey Business School
But how many business leaders are currently using AI tech in day-to-day operations or plan to? Half of the companies ResumeBuilder surveyed in February said they are using ChatGPT; 30% said they plan to do so. Since the survey was completed, more professionals have started using generative AI. There has been a growing concern that generative AI could replace jobs, and perhaps not the ones most expected. On the hiring side, 82% of respondents said they had used generative AI for hiring in a recent ResumeBuilder update.
In this article CTRN Follow your favorite stocks CREATE FREE ACCOUNTCommuters exit a Wall Street subway station near the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, US. Yet, even as layoffs in tech and beyond mount, employees are pushing back against leaders who issue return-to-office mandates. Companies that look to recreate a pre-pandemic way of working are going to be left behind when it comes to keeping and attracting the best talent. At the CFO meeting, she told a majority male group of finance leaders to look around the room. And believe me, if being in the office was going to work to get more women and people of color promoted, it would have happened already.
Text-to-image tools like OpenAI's DALL-E, Midjourney, Stable Diffusion, and DreamUp can render images in various styles in seconds with a few words of direction. Now those purchasers can use the artist's work without compensating the artist at all," the class-action court filing against Stable Diffusion states. Stable Diffusion did not provide a comment by press time. Companies are selling AI-generated prints and Stable Diffusion can learn to copy an artist's style within hours. Given how new generative AI is, it's not surprising the legal system has yet to catch up.
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