Martin Scorsese gets backlash after endorsing ‘creatively freeing’ AI

Martin Scorsese gets backlash after endorsing ‘creatively freeing’ AI

Legendary film-maker Martin Scorsese has stepped into the fierce debate over the rise of artificial intelligence in Hollywood by endorsing an AI tool that he says has been “creatively freeing” in the pre-production process.

The Taxi Driver, Goodfellas and Wolf of Wall Street director has become an adviser to AI company Black Forest Labs, saying he wants to “push the bounds of creativity to create deeper and richer experiences for audiences”.

The company released a video of Scorsese using AI to instantly create images for storyboards, which show how key characters, locations and scenes should look.


AI is just a matter of time.

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Why people hate humanoid robots

Why people hate humanoid robots

At Cooper’s Brewery in Adelaide, the largest family-owned brewing business in Australia, forklifts glide around the sizeable factory floor. With ease, they shelve boxes of lagers and ales. But nobody is at the wheel. In fact, there isn’t a wheel at all. Or a seat. These forklifts are automated guided vehicles (AGVs), a pretty old form of robotics that uses lasers, floor markers or other navigation systems to follow pre-planned paths.

People had always imagined that robots would look like us, but these forklifts hint at a different future — one in which robots are made in the image of the work, not the worker.

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Robotaxis Are Spreading Across the U.S.—and So Is the Backlash

This was supposed to be the year that robotaxis hit Main Street across the U.S., as companies like Alphabet’s Waymo, Tesla and Amazon.com’s Zoox launch AI-powered autonomous rides in dozens of cities.

But as hundreds of robot cars collide with humans, both literally and figuratively, tensions are rising. The problems cropping up in police reports and viral social-media posts range from the concerning to the comical.

Over Mother’s Day weekend, Andy Milheizler’s quiet Atlanta cul-de-sac was overrun with empty Waymo vehicles.

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Phoenix Built an Empire of Cubicle Jobs. AI Is Coming to Tear It Down.

Phoenix Built an Empire of Cubicle Jobs. AI Is Coming to Tear It Down.

PHOENIX—All around this desert city’s sprawling metro area, low-rise office parks with tinted windows and vast parking lots stretch to the horizon. This is America’s back office.

Abundant land and cheap labor made Phoenix a premier place for companies to stash lower-paid office workers who don’t need to be physically close to clients or headquarters. The cubicle-based jobs—customer service, data entry, payroll processing—created a vital ladder to the middle class, helping replace factory work lost to overseas competition.

Now, these white-collar jobs are fading, too, thanks to continued offshoring and, increasingly, artificial intelligence. Tens of thousands of local workers suddenly face an uncertain future.

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In “Magnifica humanitas,” Pope Leo fires a broadside against AI companies

In “Magnifica humanitas,” Pope Leo fires a broadside against AI companies

VATICAN CITY — In his first encyclical, Pope Leo XIV put forth an ode to human dignity in the era of AI on Monday, delivering a far-ranging treatise on the morality of technology that included a dramatic plea for guardrails to ensure that artificial intelligence eases — rather than exacerbates — inequality and poverty, helping to improve conditions for workers and limiting the power of technology companies over the vast computing resources that could reshape how human beings live.

An encyclical is among the highest forms of papal documents, and Leo’s first — his most important writing to date — positions AI as the catalyst of a new kind of industrial revolution, a cognitive one that has already begun to redefine how the world works, lives, plays, loves and wages war. The document sets a clear tone for Leo’s early papacy, elevating the ethics of AI to a religious imperative in the same way Pope Francis did with the fight against climate change a decade ago.

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Bank boss apologises for saying AI will replace ‘lower value’ humans

Bank boss apologises for saying AI will replace ‘lower value’ humans

The boss of Standard Chartered has apologised for saying artificial intelligence would replace “lower value” humans.

Bill Winters, who has run the London-listed bank for more than a decade, said this week that Standard Chartered’s push into AI would eliminate thousands of roles, replacing “lower-value human capital” with technology.

The comments sparked a backlash and in a post on LinkedIn on Friday following the uproar, Mr Winters apologised for his choice of words.

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Big Tech’s big data-centre problem

Big Tech’s big data-centre problem

In April, the Big Four tech firms – Alphabet, Amazon, Meta and Microsoft – pledged to invest a combined $725 billion in AI infrastructure over the next year. The rosy global future these companies envision is fuelled by a never-ending expansion of data centres. These are massive banks of microchips which require vast energy sources to power them, and large reservoirs of water to cool them.

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Why AI will tip human evolution in favour of conservative and religious people

Why AI will tip human evolution in favour of conservative and religious people

THERE is a fascinating short story by EM Forster called The Machine Stops. In this story, humans live underground and are completely reliant on a machine which does everything for them. Strong, healthy people have been bred out because they become unhappy living underground. Then, one day, the machine stops and humans are plunged back into the harsh Darwinian conditions that we were subject to until the Industrial Revolution. The story is a cliff hanger, but the future is obvious: there is going to be mass death.

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Sam Altman’s on top in Silicon Valley. Former colleagues keep saying that he’s a liar.

Sam Altman’s on top in Silicon Valley. Former colleagues keep saying that he’s a liar.

OAKLAND, Calif. — “Do you always tell the truth?” an attorney for Tesla CEO Elon Musk gruffly asked Sam Altman, CEO of ChatGPT maker OpenAI, in federal court this week.

“I believe I’m a truthful person,” Altman replied. The attorney pivoted, asking him if people Altman did business with would ever think he misled them. “I can’t answer that for other people,” said Altman — but several had already had their say in court.

Altman spoke on Tuesday in the closing days of a trial in which several of his onetime close associates, including former OpenAI executives and board members, testified that he misled or lied to them.

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Artificial intelligence industry claims looming ‘singularity’ will change everything

Artificial intelligence industry claims looming ‘singularity’ will change everything

It has been called the most important chart in the world.

Every time one of the world’s top artificial intelligence companies unveils a new system, employees at the US research organisation METR put it through its paces, testing its ability to complete a series of increasingly complex tasks.

The tasks are measured by how long each one would take a skilled human.

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California’s War on Autonomous Trucking

California’s War on Autonomous Trucking

As notorious as California freeways are, the state’s leading gubernatorial candidates are vying to make things even worse. Former Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra and billionaire fossil-fuel investor Tom Steyer have each vowed to reverse the California DMV policy authorizing autonomous truck testing. Though framed publicly as a safety issue, the candidates occasionally reveal that the real conflict is between labor and technology.

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Government-Controlled AI Could Enable Surveillance, Impact Free Expression: Report

Government-Controlled AI Could Enable Surveillance, Impact Free Expression: Report

Greater government control over artificial intelligence in Canada could allow increased surveillance of users and discourage people from speaking freely in private interactions with AI systems, according to a Canadian rights advocacy group.

Increased state involvement in AI systems could also lead to routine government access to private conversations and data, according to a May 5 report by the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms (JCCF).

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‘We had people come just to see it’: Amazon delivers its first UK parcels by drone

‘We had people come just to see it’: Amazon delivers its first UK parcels by drone

Amazon has become the first retailer in the UK to start a drone delivery service with a limited launch in Darlington, County Durham.

Packages weighing less than 5lb (2.2kg) and containing everyday items such as beauty products, batteries and cables are now being delivered within a 7.5 mile (12km) radius of Amazon’s fulfilment centre.

The tech giant is convinced there is demand for ultra-fast deliveries and hopes to slowly expand the service.

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AI Romance and Existential Despair

AI Romance and Existential Despair

David Brooks recently described the skeptical attitude toward romantic relationships, particularly among younger Americans, as “the Great Detachment.” Brooks views our collective renunciation of binding romantic ties as the logical development of a culture that worships the self, prizing individual autonomy above all else. For Brooks, the modern self chiefly exerts its autonomy through the pursuit of professional success. But while the self may be freer and lighter than ever before in terms of obligations to others, Brooks sees it as rootless, friendless, and partnerless.

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Giorgia Meloni criticises AI-generated photo of herself in lingerie

Giorgia Meloni criticises AI-generated photo of herself in lingerie

Giorgia Meloni has reposted a fake, AI-generated photo of herself dressed in lingerie that has circulated on social media, warning her followers not to trust “dangerous” images they see online.

“There are numerous fake photos of me circulating these days, generated with artificial intelligence and passed off as real by some diligent opponent,” she wrote on X.

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