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Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates knows he's the subject of many a conspiracy theory. He recently told CNET about an encounter he had with a woman who thinks he uses microchips to track people. Gates said he responded, "I really don't need to track you in particular." Go to newsletter preferences Thanks for signing up! download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy .
Persons: Bill Gates, Gates, , Bill Gates — Organizations: CNET, Service, Netflix, Business
How ‘Deepfake Elon Musk’ Became the Internet’s Biggest Scammer An A.I.-powered version of Mr. Musk has appeared in thousands of inauthentic ads, contributing to billions in fraud. Mr. Beauchamp, an 82-year-old retiree, saw a video late last year of Mr. Musk endorsing a radical investment opportunity that promised rapid returns. “I mean, the picture of him — it was him,” Mr. Beauchamp said about the video he saw of Mr. Musk. Original A.I. Audio Original Original A.I.
Persons: ‘ Deepfake Elon, Musk, Steve Beauchamp, Elon, Beauchamp, , ” Mr, ‘ Pick, ’ that’s, “ It’s, , Francesco Cavalli, Scammers, Thorold Barker, Sensity, Warren Buffett, Jeff Bezos, “ Elon, Donald J, Trump, Elon Musk, Andrew Forrest, scammers, Lou Steinberg, Cavalli, Eastern Europe — cobble, “ There’s, Molly White, Finn Brunton, Davis, “ I’m Organizations: A.I, Deloitte, Wall, Street, Amazon, India, Facebook, YouTube, Better Business Bureau, CNET, Meta, Hong Kong’s Securities, Futures Commission, Federal Trade Commission, Federal Bureau of Investigations, TED, Fox News, Eastern Europe —, Tesla, University of California, CNN, New York Times, Magna, The New York Times, Better Locations: Sensity, India, Russia, China, Eastern Europe, Ontario, Canada
Mr. Shah led a buyout of Ziff Davis, a century-old magazine publisher whose titles chronicled the early tech boom, in 2010. The company was then acquired by J2 Global, which Mr. Shah eventually split into two pieces. One company, Ziff Davis, kept well-known publishing brands like Mashable, and the other kept a fax provider called eFax. But Mr. Shah said that he believed additional deals like the one for CNET would increase its profits. Mr. Shah said he decided to acquire CNET partly because it is well-known industry brand, and its sizable audience will give Ziff Davis greater clout with advertisers looking to reach tech consumers.
Persons: Shah, Ziff Davis, Ziff Davis’s Organizations: J2 Global, Mashable, CNET, CBS, Red Ventures
Apple's scale and specificity of vision also make it the first Big Tech company to get AI integration right. The fact that people are disappointed in Apple says more about the hype around AI's capabilities than it does about Apple. In that way, Apple's cautious approach may be a service for the rest of the tech industry. By slowly acclimatizing its constellation of users to AI that makes their lives better instead of frustrating them, Apple makes the tech feel like a natural upgrade instead of an unreliable, scary intrusion. AdvertisementSure, Apple's AI may not be sexy or scary, but at least it doesn't seem stupid.
Persons: Katie Collins, Mark Gurman, Jordan Hart, Elon Musk, OpenAI's, Marc Andreessen's, confidants, Musk, Tesla, AI's, that's, Yann LeCun, Siri Organizations: Worldwide Developers, Apple, Apple Intelligence, Big Tech, Nvidia Locations: Silicon Valley, Silicon, Albany, New York City, New York
But a closer look at the bylines populating the local site and a national network of others — Sarah Kim, Jake Rodriguez, Mitch M. Rosenthal — reveals a tiny badge with the words “AI.” These are not real bylines. The outlet, Hoodline, is not the first or only news site to harness AI. Sports Illustrated deleted several articles from its website after they were found to have been published under fake author names. Keeping local news aliveOn Hoodline’s network of local news sites, it is difficult to find an article not written by the software. But the transformation at Hoodline shows that bigger solutions are needed to keep vital local news reporting alive.
Persons: Sarah Kim, Jake Rodriguez, Mitch M, Rosenthal —, , Hoodline, ” Zachary Chen, ” Chen, “ Nina, Mark Graham, Peter Adams, , ” Adams, Chen, Danielle Coffey, ” Coffey, That’s, Felix Simon, ” Simon, Simon, Benjamin Toff, Hoodline San Francisco ’, Nuala, ” Bishari Organizations: CNN, Media, Tech, Gannett, Internet, Wayback Machine, News Literacy, LinkedIn, Media Alliance, News Corp, Reuters Institute for, Journalism, University of Oxford, Research, University of Minnesota, San Francisco Chronicle Locations: embarrassments, San Francisco, Philippines, Hoodline San
Ceramics maker Maruwa is helping cool data centers amid the AI boom. Maruwa's 200-year history in ceramics contributes to its competitive edge. AdvertisementThe AI boom is driving a surge in data center construction that's sucking up tons of energy. By 2030, data centers are expected to consume 35 gigawatts of power annually, up from 17 gigawatts in 2022, according to McKinsey & Company. Related storiesThis is welcome news to perhaps no one more than a centuries-old Japanese ceramics maker that got its start making dinnerware.
Persons: , Goldman Sachs, Mitsuhiro Icho Organizations: Maruwa, Service, McKinsey & Company, CNET, McKinsey, Financial Times
CNN —Last week, I ditched work one day and went to a matinee at a local AMC theater. It was a Timothée Chalamet movie, because statistically of course it was. There are few things this movie nerd loves more than a big, loud sci-fi fantasy epic on an IMAX screen. It’s as if big movie chains are responding to the dire warnings about the death of their industry by deciding they’ll simply force-feed their remaining audience as much monetizable property as possible. Long live the fun movie theater experience, which is totally possible!
Persons: Sara Stewart, Sara Stewart Todd Thompson, you’ve, Denis Villeneuve’s, I’d, Nicole Kidman, , Maria Menounos “, they’ll, Will, Paul Atreides, Kidman, Long, CNET’s Joan Solsman, , , Bob Cooney, you’re, Adam Aron, guy’s Organizations: CNN, AMC, Warner Bros ., PSA Locations: Pennsylvania, Arrakis, Alamo, Noovie
Read previewPresident Joe Biden's cognitive abilities may be better than some say they are — at least according to two AI chatbots. Some who analyzed it said Hur's claims about Biden's memory issues were overstated. And both chatbots' verdicts were that Biden's cognitive abilities are just fine. "These aspects are essential indicators of cognitive abilities and suggest that he could perform cognitively demanding tasks during the interview." AdvertisementWhen it came to Biden's memory, ChatGPT found that he displayed memory recall by describing interactions and processes related to handling classified documents with context.
Persons: , Joe Biden's, Robert Hur, Hur, Biden, Beau, Beau died, Claude Pro, ChatGPT, Claude, Anthropic, didn't, Axel Springer Organizations: Service, Business, CNET
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailCNET: You really have to be an early adopter to appreciate Apple's Vision ProScott Stein, editor at large at CNET, discusses the pros and cons of Apple's new Vision Pro headset, and what it will take to be an eventual success for the company.
Persons: Scott Stein Organizations: CNET, Apple's
Read previewThere's a lot of hype around the new Apple Vision Pro ahead of its launch in the US this Friday. AdvertisementIt's great for entertainment like watching movies …Reviewers seemed to have a positive experience watching movies on the Vision Pro. Spoonauer felt he "could see myself taking the Vision Pro on business trips and using it back at the hotel." "Other headsets have eye tracking and hand tracking, but none have the combination working as smoothly, subtly and intuitively as the Vision Pro," he wrote. Patel called the Vision Pro "a VR headset masquerading as an AR headset."
Persons: , preorders, MacRumors, Nilay Patel, Mark Spoonauer, Joanna Stern, CNET's Scott Stein, Patel, Stein, Stern, There's, CNBC's Todd Haselton, Spoonauer, peck, Haselton, Slack, it's, I've Organizations: Service, Apple Vision, Apple, Business, Meta, Vision, Meta Quest Locations: visionOS
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailWhat the launch of Apple Vision Pro means for the company and the stockJason Ware, Albion Financial Group CIO, and Scott Stein, CNET Editor-at-Large, discuss the outlook for the Apple Vision Pro headset.
Persons: Jason Ware, Scott Stein Organizations: Apple Vision, Albion Financial, CNET, Apple
Sports Illustrated published articles by fake authors with AI-generated profile pictures, Futurism reported. The magazine denied using AI but said it would take down the articles while it investigated. The magazine said it will take down several articles after a report found they were written by fake, AI-generated authors. Futurism identified two Sports Illustrated writers, " Drew Ortiz" and " Sora Tanaka ," whose biographies appeared to be fake. In a statement to Futurism, Sports Illustrated owner Arena Group denied publishing AI-generated articles but said they were removing the pieces while an internal investigation took place.
Persons: , Drew Ortiz, Sora Tanaka, Ortiz's, Ross Levinsohn Organizations: Service, Sports Illustrated, Sports, Arena Group, AdVon Commerce, Arena, Gannett, Tech, CNET, Business Locations: NewsGuard
Sports Illustrated is the latest media company to see its reputation damaged by being less than forthcoming — if not outright dishonest — about who or what is writing its stories at the dawn of the artificial intelligence age. The once-powerful publication said it was firing a company that produced articles for its website written under the byline of authors who apparently don't exist. Earlier this year, experiments with AI went awry at both the Gannett newspaper chain and the CNET technology website. On Monday, the Futurism website reported that Sports Illustrated used stories for product reviews that had authors it could not identify. At the end of each such story is a note that explains technology's role in its production, a spokeswoman said.
Persons: , Tom Rosenstiel, ” Rosenstiel, , Jeff Jarvis, Drew Ortiz, “ Drew, AdVon, AdVon wasn't, LedeAI, Jarvis, Gannett, Connie Guglielmo, ” Guglielmo, Emma Heegar, ” Buzzfeed, ” ___ David Bauder Organizations: Gannett, CNET, University of Maryland, Arena, Time Inc, , AdVon Commerce, Sports Illustrated Union, Staff, Associated Press, NBA, Data Locations: Santa Barbara, Calif, Sportradar
The Cambridge Dictionary is updating the definition of the word "hallucinate" because of AI. Hallucination is the phenomenon where AI convincingly spits out factual errors as truth. It's a word that also captures one of the AI industry's key challenges: misinformation. AdvertisementThe Cambridge Dictionary's newly crowned word of the year is a familiar one, but it's taking on a new meaning because of AI. Business leaders and misinformation experts have also voiced their concerns over how AI might worsen the state of online misinformation.
Persons: , Morgan Stanley, Wendalyn Nichols Organizations: Cambridge, Service, Gizmodo, CNET, Microsoft, AIs
Shara TibkenShara Tibken is the Personal Tech team’s news editor, based in San Francisco. She spent nine years at CNET, most recently as managing editor of the CNET News team. She was the Apple beat reporter for six years, and covered Samsung and other mobile device makers. She’s had two journalism fellowships in Germany, and has written extensively about 5G and the digital divide. She began her journalism career at Dow Jones Newswires, where she covered semiconductors, data storage and IBM.
Persons: Shara, She’s, Dow Jones Newswires Organizations: Tech, CNET, CNET News, Apple, Samsung, Dow, IBM Locations: San Francisco, Germany
Kirk McDonald, the North America CEO of WPP's media buying division GroupM, is set to leave the company, GroupM confirmed on Monday. Mindshare Global CEO Adam Gerhart will take on additional duties as GroupM North America CEO while the company searches for a permanent replacement, Juhl wrote. "He has also been a valuable partner to me and the global GroupM leadership community more broadly." Under McDonald's leadership, GroupM North America has sought to implement a "responsible investment strategy." He has also been a valuable partner to me and the global GroupM leadership community more broadly.
Persons: Kirk McDonald, GroupM, Christian Juhl, McDonald, Adam Gerhart, Juhl, Kirk, Mark Read, Read, Mark Read's bounceback, we've, Kirk McDonald's, I'm, Adam, He's, Christian Organizations: North America, GroupM Global, Mindshare, North, America, WPP, Adobe, GroupM, AT, Time Inc, CNET, Pacific Islanders, Mindshare's Global, GroupM North, Global, NA Locations: Canada, North America, GroupM, America, American, GroupM North America, New York
It's not adopted the strict return-to-office mandates enforced by some Silicon Valley firms. But Nvidia, whose chips are powering the AI revolution, is not enforcing strict return-to-office mandates. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang speaks during a press conference at The MGM during CES 2018 in Las Vegas on January 7, 2018. Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty ImagesYet the companies snapping up Nvidia's chips don't all agree. But Nvidia's astounding growth undermines the claims made by some Silicon Valley bigwigs.
Persons: Bard, It's, Jensen Huang, , Beau Davidson, Davidson, Mandel Ngan, Mark Zuckerberg, Sam Altman, OpenAI, they're Organizations: Nvidia, Service, Venture, Commerical Observer, MGM, Getty, Meta, Reuters, CNET Locations: Silicon, Las Vegas, AFP, China, Hong Kong, Santa Clara
Workers using OpenAI's ChatGPT may actually perform more poorly than those who don't, new BCG research finds. AdvertisementAdvertisementIf you're using ChatGPT as a shortcut at work, you may want to be extra careful. For tasks "inside the frontier," consultants using AI were "significantly more productive" and "produced significantly higher quality results" than those who weren't using the chatbot. BCG's findings demonstrate a cautionary tale for workers thinking about using ChatGPT to help do their jobs. AI-generated errors may only get worse: In a recent paper, AI researchers found that generative AI models could soon be trained on AI-generated content — a phenomenon they call "model collapse."
Persons: , it's, Wharton, Saren Rajendran, ChatGPT, NewsGuard, Bard, James Webb Organizations: Service, Boston Consulting, Harvard, MIT, CNET, James Webb Space Telescope
There have been numerous reports saying the new iPhone 15 Pro can encounter overheating issues. Some iPhone 15 Pro owners have taken to social media sites in the US and China to complain about the issue. The iPhone 15 Pro is the first phone from Apple made with a titanium frame. Justin Sullivan / Getty ImagesNotably, Apple has not attributed any of the overheating issues to the titanium frame on iPhone 15 Pro models, pushing back on a theory from noted Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. The iPhone 15 Pro is the first smartphone made by Apple that features a titanium frame.
Persons: Apple, , Max, Justin Sullivan, Ming, Chi Kuo, Kuo Organizations: Apple, Service, Street, Bloomberg, CNET Locations: iPhones, China
Apple recently announced new FineWoven iPhone cases to replace its leather ones. CNET's Patrick Holland said the FineWoven case has "visible tradeoffs," like a circular imprint left from MagSafe charging after only a week. On Amazon, the black iPhone 15 Pro Max FineWoven case has a 1.3-star rating with nine reviews as of this writing, and the blue iPhone 15 Pro FineWoven case has a 2.6-star rating from seven reviews. AdvertisementAdvertisement"Taking my FineWoven case and wallet back when I pickup the phone on Friday. The FineWoven cases aren't the only new Apple product to leave users underwhelmed.
Persons: aren't, Allison Johnson, Nilay Patel, I've, Carrie Marshall, CNET's Patrick Holland, Max FineWoven, it's, Apple, Apple's MacBooks Organizations: Apple, Service, Lightning Locations: Wall, Silicon
Dan’s research and teaching focus is on using AI for legal services and the regulation of AI in society. For instance, we can develop AI tools to help individuals understand their responsibilities and rights, and preserve and enforce those rights. People in businesses, large and small, are already using chatbots, AI assistants and other AI tools to help them comply with laws, regulations and internal policies. Additionally, new roles are emerging in the legal industry, such as legal engineers who build systems, legal data scientists and legal operations professionals. AI tools will then quickly re-optimize decisions associated with inventory shipments, staffing and promotions.
Persons: ” That’s, Dropbox, Goldman Sachs, isn’t, Erich S, Huang, ” Erich S, Huang I’ve, Regina Barzilay, Barzilay, Geoffrey Hinton, radiologists, , , Daniel W, Linna, Dan, , ” Daniel W, Refik, Anadol, , Adam Elmachtoub, Nisreen, Theodore Kim, don’t, ” Theodore Kim Moreover, Janis Joplin, Jackie Jormp, We’re, Baz Luhrmann’s “, Gatsby, That’s, Leonardo DiCaprio, mockbusters, Eirini, GitHub Copilot, Ashok Goel, Jill Watson, ” Ashok Goel, Kristen DiCerbo, Alireza, Davis Organizations: CNN, CNET, International Association of Machinists, Aerospace Workers, Informatics, Verily, Duke Health, Biomedical Informatics, Duke University School of Medicine, Adobe, Apple, Electrical Engineering, Computer Science Department, MIT, Jameel Clinic, Machine Learning, MacArthur, National Academy of Engineering, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Northwestern’s Pritzker School of Law, McCormick School of Engineering, Northwestern University’s CS, Center, Better Housing, UCLA’s Department of Design Media Arts, The Museum, Modern Art, Centre Pompidou, Walt Disney Concert, Department of Industrial Engineering, Research, Columbia University, NBA, Spice, Digital Organisation and Society, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK Academy of Information Systems, Yale, Pixar, Technical, Writers Guild of America, SAG, Hollywood, YouTube, Tech, Developers, Georgia Institute of Technology, National AI, Adult, Education, US National Science Foundation, Georgia Tech, Khan Academy, Systems, Studies, Agricultural Engineering, University of California, university’s, Agriculture, Labor Locations: outplacement, Iceland
Gannett has paused the use of AI to write sports articles after readers pushed back. AdvertisementAdvertisementA US newspaper giant has paused the use of AI to write articles after they were savagely mocked on social media. A spokesperson for Gannett confirmed to Insider that the company had paused the use of LedeAI tools to write articles, a move initially reported by Axios. Some of its AI-generated articles were mocked on social media for their repetition and jarring cliches. In April, Insider's global editor-in-chief Nicholas Carlson said the company would start using AI to generate outlines for stories and craft headlines, for example.
Persons: Axios, Nicholas Carlson Organizations: Gannett, Columbus Dispatch, Westerville, Worthington, Dispatch, Des Moines Register, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, CNET, New York Times, Bloomberg Locations: Arizona Republic, Florida
New York CNN —Newspaper chain Gannett has paused the use of an artificial intelligence tool to write high school sports dispatches after the technology made several major flubs in articles in at least one of its papers. Several high school sports reports written by an AI service called LedeAI and published by the Columbus Dispatch earlier this month went viral on social media this week — and not in a good way. Many of the reports feature identical language, describing “high school football action,” noting when one team “took victory away from” another and describing “cruise-control” wins. Gannett has paused its experiment with LedeAI in all of its local markets that had been using the service, according to the company. CNET earlier this year also paused an experiment using AI to write stories after it was forced to issue multiple corrections on AI-generated reports.
Persons: LedeAI, , Axios, , ” LedeAI Organizations: New, New York CNN — Newspaper, Gannett, Columbus Dispatch, Machine, Worthington, CNN, Louisville Courrier, AZ, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Dispatch, CNET Locations: New York, Ohio, AZ Central, Florida, , , OpenAI
Generative AI could soon be trained on AI-generated content — and experts are raising the alarm. The new term comes as AI-generated content filled with errors continues to flood the internet. Other AI researchers have coined their own terms to describe the training method. Jathan Sadowski, a senior fellow at the Emerging Technologies Research Lab in Australia who researches AI, called this phenomenon "Habsburg AI," arguing that AI systems heavily trained on outputs of other generative AI tools can create "inbred mutant" responses that contain "exaggerated, grotesque features." These new terms come as AI-generated content has flooded the internet since OpenAI launched ChatGPT last November.
Persons: Jathan, paywalls, Ray Wang, Baji, Cohere, OpenAI, ChatGPT, It's, Gizmodo, Kai, Cheng Yang, OpenAI's chatbot, Yang Organizations: University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, Stanford, Rice, Emerging Technologies, Constellation Research, CNET, Microsoft, Ottawa Food Bank Locations: Australia, Ottawa
But as more people turn to this buzzy technology for things like homework help, workplace research, or health inquiries, one of its biggest pitfalls is becoming increasingly apparent: AI models often just make things up. Researchers have come to refer to this tendency of AI models to spew inaccurate information as “hallucinations,” or even “confabulations,” as Meta’s AI chief said in a tweet. A number of high-profile hallucinations from AI tools have already made headlines. Cracking down on AI hallucinations, however, could limit AI tools’ ability to help people with more creative endeavors — like users that are asking ChatGPT to write poetry or song lyrics. How to prevent or fix AI hallucinations is a “point of active research,” Venkatasubramanian said, but at present is very complicated.
Persons: Suresh Venkatasubramanian, Venkatasubramanian, , ” Venkatasubramanian, West, Bard, James Webb, ChatGPT, they’re, ” West, Google’s Bard, OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Sundar Pichai, Pichai, , Sam Altman, OpenAI Organizations: CNN, Brown University, ” Companies, University of Washington, Center, Google, James Webb Space Telescope, New, CNET, CBS, Indraprastha, of Information Technology Locations: United States, New York, Delhi
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