"I think there is a great risk": will AI steal our jobs?
Published
on
By
Artificial intelligence is not a new concept. However, the growing advancements have the potential to revolutionise industries, improve efficiency, and enhance the quality of life.
Along with its promising advancements, artificial intelligence also brings certain risks and challenges that must be acknowledged and addressed.
It has become the focus of lawmakers, who are working towards greater regulation of the sector.
U.S. and European Union officials recently met in Sweden to weigh up the benefits and challenges of artificial intelligence, and other emerging technologies.
"The AI process is creeping up on us," said Dr Keith Suter, who is a global futurist.
"You’ve got competition between companies."
It's almost like some of us can see this raft that's heading towards the rapids and a disappearance towards the waterfall, and we’re giving a warning but it's not being heeded because everybody's in this race to get down to the river," Dr Suter said.
Ukraine prepares for a summer of violence
Should there be more resources available to American Veterans?
Published
on
By
Some of the world's largest technology companies, including Apple and Amazon have banned or restricted OpenAI's ChatGPT.
The tool relies on artificial intelligence to produce responses to prompts entered by users.
However, major brands remain concerned around the privacy risks because of the data ChatGPT uses to improve its accuracy.
Samsung has previously reported employees unintentionally leaking confidential internal source code and meeting recordings through ChatGPT.
Meanwhile, Apple has banned the web-platform over concerns surrounding data leaks.
Published
on
By
Linda Yaccarino was once the head of NBC Universal's advertising and partnerships team.
Her appointment follows a Twitter poll where Musk asked users to vote on whether he should resign.
At the time, 57.5 per cent voted ‘yes’.
Twitter is undergoing a transformation, including addressing concerns around rising hate speech and disinformation on the platform.
Mr Musk said Yaccarino is the perfect person for the job.
"I think Linda's going to do a great job running Twitter. I’ll provide guidance on technology development.
"Twitter has released more changes in the last six months than it has in the last six years."
Twitter said it has taken down over 6 million pieces of content in the first half of 2022, before the platform was acquired over by billionaire Elon Musk.
Benjamin Powers is a technology reporter at The Messenger, who said the platform has some issues to address.
"It's unclear how much he’ll [Musk] be stepping back."
The New York Times reports advertising revenue attracted US$88 million from 1 April to the first week of May—a decrease of 59 per cent from a year earlier.
"I think the big problem is revenue. The pullback is that they’ve lost about 58 per cent of advertising revenue, which is huge for a company like Twitter.
"The subscription business, which involves getting a blue check, you pay $8 a month, really hasn't kept up with that dynamic," he said.
Published
on
By
Australia recently banned TikTok from all federal government owned devices over security concerns.
Canberra is the latest in a string of U.S.-backed allies to take action against the popular video-sharing app.
The ban centres around concerns China could use the app to trace users’ data, and undermine democratic values.
Senator James Paterson is the Australian Shadow Minister for Home Affairs and Cyber Security, who said TikTok poses a risk to Australians.
"They can get access to awful amount of information on your phone.
"Because it's beholden to the Chinese Communist Party, there's no guarantee it won't fall into their hands," he said.
Senator Paterson said there are "six or seven million Australians who use the app."
Is the U.S. debt deal bad fiscal policy?
AI creates a song imitating Drake and The Weeknd
Ukraine prepares for a summer of violence
Everything you need to know about music NFTs
Who will win the global metaverse race?
Is the metaverse the future of social network?
Accelerating cybersecurity skills in the workforce
Deepfakes are taking over Hollywood