Permission
/Impending death gives permission to feel, to let go, to recognize what’s important.
Impending death gives permission to feel, to let go, to recognize what’s important.
"A new study of a dozen A.I.-detection services by researchers at the University of Maryland found that they had erroneously flagged human-written text as A.I.-generated about 6.8 percent of the time, on average. 'At least from our analysis, current detectors are not ready to be used in practice in schools to detect A.I. plagiarism,' said Soheil Feizi, an author of the paper and an associate professor of computer science at Maryland." -New York Times
“What constitutes legitimate use of AI and what is out of bounds? Academic leaders don’t always agree whether hypothetical scenarios described appropriate uses of AI or not: For one example—in which a student used AI to generate a detailed outline for a paper and then used the outline to write the paper—the verdict (in a recent survey) was completely split.” -Inside Higher Ed
If your dreams don't scare you, they're not big enough.
Meta Signs Nuclear Power Deal to Fuel Its AI Ambitions – Wall Street Journal
Google is bringing ads to AI Mode – TechCrunch
How OpenAI, Google and AI makers are leaving the web behind - Axios
OpenAI Can Stop Pretending The company is great at getting what it wants—whether or not it’s beholden to a nonprofit mission. – The Atlantic
The New York Times has reached an AI licensing deal with Amazon – New York Times
AI race goes supersonic in milestone-packed week - Axios
OpenAI’s Ambitions Just Became Crystal Clear – The Atlantic
Google Unveils A.I. Chatbot, Signaling a New Era for Search - New York Times
Microsoft helped kick off the AI boom. It needs humans more than ever, its CEO says – Semafor
Journalist Karen Hao discusses her book 'Empire of AI' - NPR
The UAE and Saudi Arabia are pouring billions into U.S.-backed AI infrastructure – Wired
Google dominates AI patent applications - Axios
A Gemini-powered coding agent for designing advanced algorithms – DeepMind
Neural Networks (or artificial neural networks, ANNs) – Mathematical systems that can identify patterns in text, images and sounds. In this type of machine learning, computers learn a task by analyzing training examples. It is modeled loosely on the human brain—the interwoven tangle of neurons that process data and find complex associations. While symbolic artificial intelligence has been the dominant area of research for most of AI’s history with artificial neural networks, most recent developments in artificial intelligence have centered around neural networks. First proposed in 1944 by two University of Chicago researchers (Warren McCullough and Walter Pitts), they moved to MIT in 1952 as founding members of what’s sometimes referred to as the first cognitive science department. Neural nets remained a major research area in neuroscience and computer science until 1969. The technique enjoyed a resurgence in the 1980s, fell into disfavor in the first decade of the new century, and has returned stronger in the second decade, fueled largely by the increased processing power of graphics chips. Also, see “Transformers.”
More AI definitions here.
A North Dakota plumber had signed up to run his first half-marathon. But on the morning of the run Mike Kohler was sleepy. He wasn’t used to getting up so early. And he was wearing headphones, so he took off 15 minutes before he was supposed to—putting him with the runners competing in the full marathon. He started seeing signs that indicated he was on the wrong route, but he just assumed the two paths overlapped along the way.
Eventually, he realized his mistake but kept going. At the 13 mile mark he seriously thought about quitting. He had run as far as he had planned to run and even beat his time goal. He had nothing more to prove.
Instead, he finished the marathon.
“I’m just going to go for it, because why not?” Mike later told the Grand Forks Herald. “I’m already here, I’m already running, I’m already tired. Might as well try to finish it.”
He added, ”This just kind of proves you can do a lot more than what you think you can sometimes.”
AI is sparking a cognitive revolution. Is human creativity at risk? – Fast Company
Wired Envisions a Deepfake Future you’re not prepared for – Wired
AI Is Learning to Escape Human Control – Wall Street Journal
AI models hallucinate less than humans — just in “more surprising ways.” – Tech Crunch
Anthropic study reveals LLM reasoning isn’t always what it seems – BD Tech Talks
AI linked to explosion of low-quality biomedical research papers – Nature
The future of AI is in western Pennsylvania – Washington Post
LLMs are Making Me Dumber – Vincent Cheng
New cybersecurity risk: AI agents going rogue - Axios
AI therapy is a surveillance machine in a police state – The Verge
US government is using AI for unprecedented social media surveillance – New Scientist
Instagram's AI Chatbots Lie About Being Licensed Therapists – 404 Media
Why the AI Revolution Will Require Massive Energy Resources – AEI
Pedophiles Are Using AI To Turn Children’s Social Media Photos Into CSAM – Forbes
Audio
AI learns how vision and sound are connected, without human intervention – MIT
Amazon rolls out short-form AI-powered audio product summaries for select items – TechCrunch
NBC will use Jim Fagan’s AI-generated voice for NBA coverage –The Verge
Audible unveils plans to use AI voices to narrate audiobooks – The Guardian
This new AI tool changes a speaker's accent to American English in real-time - hear for yourself – Zdnet
An AI-generated radio host in Australia went unnoticed for months – The Verge
Melania Trump Charging Fans $25 to Listen to AI Version of Her Voice for Seven Hours – The Daily Beast
Video
We Made a Film With AI. You’ll Be Blown Away—and Freaked Out. – Wall Street Journal
Google's new AI video tool floods internet with real-looking clips – Axios
Fake movie trailers were an art form. Then came the AI slop. – Washington Post
TikTok launches TikTok AI Alive, a new image-to-video tool - TechCrunch
Google’s Veo 3 AI video generator is a slop monger’s dream - The Verge
AI-powered fanfiction blurs political reality – Semafor
Arizona Supreme Court unveils AI avatars to announce rulings - Arizona PBS
No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible. –Voltaire
"An artificial-intelligence model did something last month that no machine was ever supposed to do: It rewrote its own code to avoid being shut down. No one programmed the AI models to have survival instincts. It’s happening in the same models that power ChatGPT conversations, corporate AI deployments and, soon, U.S. military applications. OpenAI models have been caught faking alignment during testing. Anthropic has found them lying about their capabilities to avoid modification." -Wall Street Journal
“We found ChatGPT technology can get an A on structured, straightforward questions. On open-ended questions it got a 62, bringing ChatGPT's semester grade down to an 82, a low B. The study concludes that a student who puts in minimal effort, showing no effort to learn the material, could use ChatGPT exclusively, get a B and pass the course. The passing grade might be the combination of A+ in simple math and D- in analysis. They haven't learned much.” -Phys.org
One of the most important findings of my career is that daring leadership is a collection of four skill sets that are 100 percent teachable, observable, and measurable. It’s learning and unlearning that requires brave work, tough conversations, and showing up with your whole heart. Easy? No. Because choosing courage over comfort is not always our default. Worth it? Always. We want to be brave with our lives and our work. It’s why we’re here.
Brené Brown, Dare to Lead
Can generative AI replace humans in qualitative research studies? - Techxplore
The recent reduction in spelling error rates in academic papers could be due to an increased use of LLMs – OSF Preprints
AI linked to explosion of low-quality biomedical research papers - Nature
Flood of AI-assisted research ‘weakening quality of science'” – Times Higher Ed
Shoddy study designs and false findings using a large public health dataset portend future risk of exploitation by AI and paper mills – PLOS Biology
Is it OK for AI to write science papers? Nature survey shows researchers are split - Nature
MIT Says It No Longer Stands Behind Student’s AI Research Paper – Wall Street Journal
Meta releases new data set, AI model aimed at speeding up scientific research – Semafor
Experiment using AI-generated posts on Reddit draws fire for ethics concerns – Retraction Watch
AI-Reddit study leader gets warning as ethics committee moves to ‘stricter review process’ – Retraction Watch
Why misuse of generative AI is worse than plagiarism – Springer
Science sleuths flag hundreds of papers that use AI without disclosing it - Nature
Google engineer withdraws preprint after getting called out for using AI – Retraction Watch
Scientific Data Fabrication and AI—Pandora’s Box – JAMA Network
AI summary ‘trashed author’s work’ and took weeks to be corrected – Times Higher Ed
AI language models increasingly shape economics research writing, study finds – Phys.org
Artificial intelligence in vaccine research and development: an umbrella review – Frontiers
“I cannot figure out what I am supposed to do with my life if these things can do anything I can do faster and with way more detail and knowledge.” The student said he felt crushed. Some heads nodded. But not all. Julia, a senior in the history department, jumped in. “The A.I. is huge. A tsunami. But it’s not me. It can’t touch my me-ness. It doesn’t know what it is to be human, to be me.” - D. Graham Burnett writing in The New Yorker
On campus, we’re in a bizarre interlude: everyone seems intent on pretending that the most significant revolution in the world of thought in the past century isn’t happening. The approach appears to be: “We’ll just tell the kids they can’t use these tools and carry on as before.” This is, simply, madness. And it won’t hold for long. -D. Graham Burnett writing in The New Yorker
Injustice is the most painful hurt in childhood. –Charles Dickens
Speed means nothing without quality. Shipping buggy, unmaintainable code faster is a false victory – you’re just speeding towards a cliff. The best engineers will balance the two: using AI to move faster without breaking things (at least not breaking things any more than we already do!). It’s about finding that sweet spot where AI does the heavy lifting and humans ensure everything stands up properly. - Addy Osmani writing on Elevate
Instead of wishing the ball would be hit to someone else, want the ball to be hit your way.
Having an open mind is nothing; the object of opening the mind, as the opening the mouth, is to shut it again on something solid. -GK Chesterton, born May 29, 1874
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