AI will make 2024 election a ‘mess,’ billionaire ex-Google chief Schmidt says
Social media is not “protecting us from false generative AI,” Eric Schmidt said Monday.
Social media is not “protecting us from false generative AI,” Eric Schmidt said Monday.
The software giant and billionaire cofounder made a number of AI promises on Monday, from new products to $500 million to invest in startups.
The attorney said in a filing that he didn’t understand ChatGPT “was not a search engine, but a generative language-processing tool.”
The human resources start-up, which was last valued at more than $1 billion, has launched an AI hiring tool called Swag.
In less than 12 months, the discourse surrounding artificial intelligence (AI) has shifted from speculative predictions about its ascent to a palpable and urgent concern among industry leaders.
An image that circulated rapidly on social media showed an apparent explosion occurring on a lawn outside the Pentagon, though the Department of Defense has denied it ever happened.
While some are predicting people will lose jobs due to artificial intelligence, Instawork cofounder and CEO Sumir Meghani wants to use AI to make better matches between people and work,
The G7, composed of the world’s seven most advanced economies, has recognized the urgency of addressing the impact of AI.
With global economic pressures continuing to impact companies, 99% of Australian executives believe emerging technologies will help their companies remain resilient on the global stage. But how quickly and efficiently the act now will determine their success or failure in the future.
Nvidia held its GTC 2023 event for developers this past week, with a range of announcements in quantum computing, the metaverse, large language models, robotics, automotive and more.