Boatsetter Is Changing the Face of Boating as More Women, Millennials and Gen Z Take to the Water
MIAMI--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jul 27, 2023--
2023-07-27 17:18
Pinterest Revenue Beats Estimates on Shopping Push
Pinterest Inc. reported second-quarter revenue that exceeded analysts’ estimates, signaling that the company’s efforts in expanding its business
2023-08-02 04:20
Score 20% off Fitbit wellness trackers, including the Charge 5 and Sense 2
Our top picks Best deal overall Fitbit Charge 5 $119.95 at Amazon (save $30) Get
2023-08-17 02:23
HP Stock Rallies on Solid Profit Forecast, Dividend Hike
The personal computer and printer company laid out both a long-term growth forecast and fiscal 2024 estimates that met or beat Street estimates.
2023-10-11 08:47
Scientists warn of threat to internet from AI-trained AIs
Future generations of artificial intelligence chatbots trained using data from other AIs could lead to a downward spiral of gibberish on the internet, a new study has found. Large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT have taken off on the internet, with many users adopting the technology to produce a whole new ecosystem of AI-generated texts and images. But using the output data from such AI systems to further train subsequent generations of AI models could result in “irreversible defects” and junk content, according to a new, yet-to-be peer-reviewed study. AI models like ChatGPT are trained using vast amounts of data pulled across internet platforms that have mostly remained human generated until now. But AI-generated data using such models have a growing presence on the internet. Researchers, including those from the University of Oxford in the UK, attempted to understand what happened when several subsequent generations of AIs are trained off each other. They found the widespread use of LLMs to publish content on the internet on a large scale “will pollute the collection of data to train them” and lead to “model collapse”. “We discover that learning from data produced by other models causes model collapse – a degenerative process whereby, over time, models forget the true underlying data distribution,” scientists wrote in the study, posted as a preprint in arXiv. The new findings suggested there to be a “first mover advantage” when it comes to training LLMs. Scientists liken this change to what happens when AI models are trained on music created by human composers and played by human musicians. The subsequent AI output then trains other models, leading to a diminishing quality of music. With subsequent generations of AI models likely to encounter poorer quality data at their source, they may start misinterpreting information by inserting false information in a process scientists call “data poisoning”. They warned that the scale at which data poisoning can happen drastically changes after the advent of LLMs. Just a few iterations of data can lead to major degradation, even when the original data is preserved, scientists said. And over time, this could lead to mistakes compounding and forcing models that learn from generated data to misunderstand reality. “This in turn causes the model to misperceive the underlying learning task,” researchers said. Scientists cautioned that steps must be taken to label AI-generated content from human-generated ones, along with efforts to preserve original human-made data for future AI training. “To make sure that learning is sustained over a long time period, one needs to make sure that access to the original data source is preserved and that additional data not generated by LLMs remain available over time,” they wrote in the study. “Otherwise, it may become increasingly difficult to train newer versions of LLMs without access to data that was crawled from the Internet prior to the mass adoption of the technology, or direct access to data generated by humans at scale.” Read More ChatGPT ‘grandma exploit’ gives users free keys for Windows 11 Protect personal data when introducing AI, privacy watchdog warns businesses How Europe is leading the world in the push to regulate AI ‘Miracle material’ solar panels to finally enter production Meta reveals new AI that is too powerful to release Reddit user’s protests against the site’s rules have taken an even more bizarre turn
2023-06-20 13:57
Westinghouse and Bechtel Solidify Project Team for AP1000® Nuclear Power Program in Poland
WARSAW, Poland--(BUSINESS WIRE)--May 25, 2023--
2023-05-26 00:45
Streamer Kai Cenat says he is 'beyond disappointed' in mayhem at NYC event
The 21-year-old social media influencer who was charged with inciting a riot after a crowd of thousands of his followers erupted in chaos in New York City last week says he is “beyond disappointed” in the bad behavior
2023-08-11 01:46
China's Baichuan, Zhipu AI launch AI models after receiving approval
SHANGHAI Chinese artificial intelligence (AI) firms Baichuan Intelligent Technology and Zhipu AI on Thursday opened their AI large
2023-08-31 09:49
TOTW 2 Predictions FC 24: Son, Trippier, Joao Cancelo and More
TOTW 2 predictions for FC 24 Ultimate Team include Heung-min Son, Joao Cancelo, Kieran Trippier, Harry Kane, Anderson Talisca and more.
2023-09-25 22:46
2023 Global Esports Summit in China: Leading Speakers Kenneth Fok, Xu Haifeng, H.R.H Prince Faisal and Global Leaders Link to Future
SHENZHEN, China--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jun 21, 2023--
2023-06-21 16:56
Flight attendant shares the things to avoid at all costs during hotel stays
A flight attendant on TikTok has opened up about what not to do when visiting hotels. In a viral clip posted to the platform, user @t_marie_the_fa_bartender shared a handful of invaluable tips that most people probably haven't ever considered. Her first tip was to not use the provided shower products unless they've been secured. She claimed she had heard horror stories about people refilling with "crazy things" such as hair removal cream. She went on to tell people to avoid using some coffee machines as they're difficult to clean out, along with the cups that are not wrapped in plastic. Sign up for our free Indy100 weekly newsletter The hotel ice bucket is also a big no-no. "I’ve heard people have done the unmentionables in those, so just use the little plastic bag," she told her 13,000 viewers. The TikToker concluded with advice to take an anti-bacterial spray to give furniture and other items a clean down. @t_marie_the_fa_bartender Lets talk about what not to do FA style! Im giving some tips! What else do ya’ll want to know #hotel #traveltiktok #dontdoit #flightattendant #blackflightattendants #nonrevlife #travellife #hotelsecrets One fellow TikToker advised in the comments to also take "wipes and ziplock bags for remote". Meanwhile, a second urged people to buy a camera detector. "Insane how many cameras are hidden. They are cheap on Amazon," they wrote – and they're not the first person to highlight this. One woman recently advised people to "always listen to their super paranoid friends" after having a suspicion about their holiday rental. And they were not wrong. Kennedy (@kennedyallegedly) and a group of friends headed to Vancouver to celebrate a birthday. They went on to check "every single shower head, all the picture frames, doorknobs, everywhere in the house for a camera". When it came to one of the plug sockets in the bathroom, that Kennedy noted did not work, she found a small hidden device pointing directly at the shower. "You can see in the top here there’s nothing, looks totally normal. And then the bottom one, look at that little camera," she said while zooming into the tiny camera lens. The woman rang the police, who seemingly confirmed a hidden camera in the property. Have your say in our news democracy. Click the upvote icon at the top of the page to help raise this article through the indy100 rankings.
2023-06-13 18:24
xQc and Asmongold dub Amber Heard dressing up as Mercy from 'Overwatch' for Elon Musk 'good idea'
Elon Musk shared a photo of Amber Heard dressed as Mercy from Overwatch, getting reactions from xQc and Asmongold
2023-09-14 17:57
You Might Like...
Asus ExpertWiFi Routers Offer Small Businesses Easy Setup, Smart Profiles
Prime Day 2023 isn't for a few weeks, but these deals aren't waiting
Spotify to use Google's AI to tailor recommendations to users
Save over $200 on the Vitamix 5200 blender this Prime Day
AI chips are hot. Here's what they are, what they're for and why investors see gold
Queen assassin case exposes ‘fundamental flaws’ in AI – safety campaigner
Get $50 of data credit for half the price with this eSim plan
Aubameyang FIFA 23: How to Complete the Flashback SBC
