Google Has Changed

I have been amused by many of the reports of Google Gemini’s peculiar behavior (for excellent examples see herehereherehere, and read Jeff’s piece), but, in my view, the most interesting thing about this episode is what it has shown about where Google now is as a company. All told, Google Gemini has yielded precisely the opposite reaction that Google’s famous search engine did upon its release. In 1998, those of us who were using AltaVista or Ask Jeeves or whatever found Google and said, “wow, that’s incredible!” This week, everyone who has had some experience with other AI products has found Gemini and said, “what total garbage!” (Or worse.)

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Expect Google’s Gemini 2.0 to be even worse

Accurate depiction of woke society.

The days when Google was held up as a paragon of cool tech innovation are long gone. Today, its search results are manipulated and crammed with ads, YouTube demonetises accurate information it doesn’t like, and just a few weeks ago the company released Gemini, an AI model that refuses to generate images of white people.

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Are we looking at the first mass market ROBOT?

The biggest names in tech — from Amazon to Microsoft — have poured roughly $675 million dollars in a robotics start-up whose ‘master plan’ is to bring the first commercial ‘humanoid’ to market, powered by AI.

The funding round is nearly ten times as much as the $70 million that this new robotics firm, Figure AI, managed to raise last May.

Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, through his venture firm Explore Investments LLC, pledged an optimistic $100 million to the company, with Microsoft investing nearly as much, $95 million.

I bet it’s programmed to hate White people.

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The bad and the ugly of supermarket self-checkouts

While living in New Brunswick, I was used to only half a dozen self-checkouts at the superstore near my apartment. But in Australia, self-checkouts are an outsized part of the grocery landscape. Many locations of Coles and Woolworths outlets – the country’s dominant grocery chains – have double that, if not more.

On a recent visit to a central Melbourne Coles, I counted nearly 40 self-checkouts, and only two employees were circulating among them to help customers. Even at grocery stores in large Canadian cities such as Montreal and Toronto, I haven’t come across self-checkout sections as grand at grocery stores.

Satan’s handiwork nothing less.

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AI-generated nonsense about rat with giant penis published by leading scientific journal

It might be considered an AI cock-up on a massive scale.

A scientific paper purporting to show the signalling pathway of sperm stem cells has met with widespread ridicule after it depicted a rodent with an anatomically eye-watering appendage and four giant testicles.

The creature, labelled “rat”, was also sitting upright in the manner of a squirrel, while the graphic was littered with nonsensical words such as “dissilced”, “testtomcels” and “senctolic”.

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Canadian TV, Film, Music Industries Ask MPs for Protection Against AI

Canada’s actors, directors and musicians are sounding the alarm over artificial intelligence, saying it threatens their livelihood and reputations.

Groups representing people who work in TV, movies and music are calling on the Liberal government to protect their industries in its AI legislation.

Actors’ union ACTRA says unbridled use of AI could result in people’s names and images being misused in artificially crafted videos—or even replace human actors entirely.


People lose jobs everyday to AI. Whether it’s a labourer replaced by an industrial robot or a clerk by software and no one says boo.

The entertainemnt business is owed no special treatment.

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How AI is quietly changing everyday life

Artificial intelligence isn’t just a niche tool for cheating on homework or generating bizarre and deceptive images. It’s already humming along in unseen and unregulated ways that are touching millions of Americans who may never have heard of ChatGPT, Bard or other buzzwords.

A growing share of businesses, schools, and medical professionals have quietly embraced generative AI, and there’s really no going back. It is being used to screen job candidates, tutor kids, buy a home and dole out medical advice.

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Neuralink: Can Musk’s brain technology change the world?

Elon Musk is no stranger to bold claims – from his plans to colonise Mars to his dreams of building transport links underneath our biggest cities. This week the world’s richest man said his Neuralink division had successfully implanted its first wireless brain chip into a human.

Is he right when he says this technology could – in the long term – save the human race itself?

Sticking electrodes into brain tissue is really nothing new.

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Right-wing German populist party hit by AI deepfake campaign amid calls to ban it

At first glance, it appears to be an extraordinary political intervention from Germany’s Chancellor.

In a video address to the nation, a man distinctly resembling and sounding like Olaf Scholz – though something about him seems a tad off – is endorsing a ban on Germany’s far-Right AfD (Alternative for Germany) party.

In fact it is a complete fake, created by campaigners using AI technology as they seek to capitalise on a new wave of anxiety about the AfD dragging Germany back into the dark days of the 1930s.

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Nine ways Elon Musk’s brain implant could change the world

Would you let Elon Musk stick a microchip in your brain? On Sunday, the billionaire’s Neuralink start-up put its first human test subject under the knife. The anonymous patient had a tiny chip inserted under their skull, entwining the minute filaments from the processor into their brain.

Musk hopes the patient will now be able to send instructions to the implant using thoughts alone.

The chip, or “brain-computer interface”, which Neuralink began developing in 2016, promises to change the lives of people with disabilities that prevent them from moving or communicating.

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China Trapping Biden on Artificial Intelligence

“China has signaled interest in joining discussions on setting rules and norms for AI, and we should welcome that,” said Bonnie Glaser of the German Marshall Fund to the Breaking Defense site. “The White House is interested in engaging China on limiting the role of AI in command and control of nuclear weapons.”

“Nobody wants to see AI controlled nuclear weapons, right?” asked Joe Wang, a former State Department and NSC staffer now at the Arlington, Virginia-based Special Competitive Studies Project, which specializes in AI and emerging technologies. “Like, even the craziest dictator can probably agree.”

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Artificial intelligence can’t replace the majority of jobs right now in cost-effective ways: study

In one of the first in-depth probes of the viability of AI displacing labour, researchers modelled the cost attractiveness of automating various tasks in the U.S., concentrating on jobs where computer vision was employed — for instance, teachers and property appraisers. They found only 23 per cent of workers, measured in terms of dollar wages, could be effectively supplanted. In other cases, because AI-assisted visual recognition is expensive to install and operate, humans did the job more economically.

23% is a lot and the rest won’t be far behind.

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