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Can AI experience cognitive dissonance?
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told Davos attendees on Tuesday that OpenAI, the startup behind viral text generator Chat GPT, will be building AI tools into all Microsoft products. said it was. Nadella’s michis drop came shortly after Getty Images sued image-generating AI tool Stable Diffusion, announcing that it had scraped copyrighted images without permission.
Chat GPT-Party
Chat GPT took the internet by storm when it opened to the public in November. Netizens were fascinated by its ability to generate compelling imitations of news articles, lyrics, resumes, and more. His Microsoft, an investor in OpenAI, is keen to capitalize on this hype. The Information reported earlier this month that Microsoft was working to integrate ChatGPT into Bing. This has brought a tortoise-and-rabbit optimism to perhaps an ever-biased competition with Google.
While this technology has taken creators by surprise, it’s almost certain that professional writers weren’t the first to chop. AI policy expert Dr. Nakeema Stefflbauer said: daily upside Chat GPT’s most obvious first commercial application is to speed up the work of customer service representatives and marketers. “Only if brands give up the ‘human factor’ as a differentiator in how satisfied their customers are from genuinely interacting with bots, can jobs be replaced,” she said.
Getty’s lawsuit against StabilityAI, the company behind Stable Diffusion, casts an uncomfortable spotlight on data AI tools as Microsoft pushes for OpenAI.
- Getty Images CEO Craig Peters told The Verge that he believes generative AI tools are at the same stage the music industry is in the Napster and Limewire era. “Similarly, we think these generative models need to deal with the intellectual property rights of others, and that’s the crux,” he said.
- Stefflbauer made another musical comparison, pointing to examples of certain artists’ styles being mimicked in Stable Diffusion. “The problem is that you can seem to ‘remix’ an image by a particular artist and get an image ‘in the style of…’ in the artist’s name, but those artists don’t get paid. The original artist wasn’t paid when the sampled artist’s work was included in the new song,” Steflbauer said.
Cave Inn: One artist is using his clout to fight AI imposters. Alt-rock icon Nick Cave posted a blog post on Tuesday saying that dozens of people sent him his Chat GPT-generated songs that mimicked his style. Picking out a particular set of fan-submitted lyrics, the famous poetic cave lashed out at the “new horrors of AI” in a very mundane way.