Go Here to Read this Fast! NYT Wordle today — answer and hints for game #1,023, Sunday, April 7
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NYT Wordle today — answer and hints for game #1,023, Sunday, April 7
Go Here to Read this Fast! NYT Wordle today — answer and hints for game #1,023, Sunday, April 7
Originally appeared here:
NYT Wordle today — answer and hints for game #1,023, Sunday, April 7
ADA dropped nearly 21% on a monthly timeframe.
Whale cohort holding more than 1,000 ADA coins shrank significantly.
Cardano’s [ADA] price action has been underwhelming in recent weeks, fuell
The post Cardano – Understanding why ADA’s whales aren’t ‘buying the dip’ appeared first on AMBCrypto.
ETH’s exchange outflows totaled $4 billion in Q1 of 2024
MVRV ratio suggested the coin was trading slightly below its realized value
According to data released by IntoTheBlock, Ethereum [E
The post Ethereum: Here’s how the market bought and sold ETH in Q1 appeared first on AMBCrypto.
Memecoins, led by Shiba Inu and Dogecoin, the two largest memecoins by market capitalization, have emerged as the unexpected frontrunners, boasting an unprecedented surge in returns amidst the crypto market’s recent upsurge.
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Shiba Inu, Dogecoin, Dogwifhat, PEPE Brace For Multi-Billion Bull Wave As Memecoins Beat Legacy Cryptos
This follows on from news of previous negotiations between Apple and various publishers for similar AI large language model (LLM) training using content from news articles. Conde Nast IAC, and NBC are among the big media names that have allegedly been in talks with Apple about licensing their content.
Apple is expected to make some major announcements about its efforts to add more AI technologies into its operating systems this June, at WWDC. Though often perceived as being behind its rivals in AI integration, Apple has made some innovations of its own.
Go Here to Read this Fast! Apple licenses millions of Shutterstock images to train its AI models
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Apple licenses millions of Shutterstock images to train its AI models
The US Court of Appeals has finally returned to the case between Apple and Masimo to hear Apple’s appeal of the ITC ruling as of April 5th. The company told the court that Masimo’s victory with the ITC was based on two flawed claims: the validity of Masimo’s affected patents, and that Masimo claimed it was making competing products.
Go Here to Read this Fast! Apple appeals US trade ban on Apple Watches
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Apple appeals US trade ban on Apple Watches
Geek Squad agents have been flooding Reddit with images of their badges and posts about “going sleeper” after the company reportedly conducted mass layoffs this week. A former employee who spoke to 404 Media said they were sent an email notifying them to work from home on Wednesday and were then called individually to be told the news about their jobs. Some, per 404 Media’s sources and numerous Reddit posts, were longtime Geek Squad agents who had been with the company for more than 10 or even 20 years. Best Buy has not yet responded to Engadget’s request for comment.
There has been an outpouring of support for the laid off workers on the unofficial Geek Squad subreddit, where many have lamented the loss of jobs they’d dedicated much of their lives to and noted that things in the lead up had been heading in a concerning direction. Some commented that their hours had dwindled in recent months, with one former employee telling 404 Media it’s been “a struggle to get by.”
Best Buy conducted mass layoffs affecting employees at its retail stores just last spring, and as The Verge reports, CEO Corie Barry indicated during the company’s February earnings call that more layoffs were coming in 2024 as Best Buy shifts resources toward AI and other areas.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/best-buys-geek-squad-agents-say-they-were-hit-by-mass-layoffs-this-week-185720480.html?src=rss
Go Here to Read this Fast! Best Buy’s Geek Squad agents say they were hit by mass layoffs this week
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Best Buy’s Geek Squad agents say they were hit by mass layoffs this week
OpenAI and Google trained their AI models on text transcribed from YouTube videos, potentially violating creators’ copyrights, according to The New York Times. The report, which describes the lengths OpenAI, Google and Meta have gone to in order to maximize the amount of data they can feed to their AIs, cites numerous people with knowledge of the companies’ practices. It comes just days after YouTube CEO Neal Mohan said in an interview with Bloomberg Originals that OpenAI’s alleged use of YouTube videos to train its new text-to-video generator, Sora, would go against the platform’s policies.
According to the NYT, OpenAI used its Whisper speech recognition tool to transcribe more than one million hours of YouTube videos, which were then used to train GPT-4. The Information previously reported that OpenAI had used YouTube videos and podcasts to train the two AI systems. OpenAI president Greg Brockman was reportedly among the people on this team. Per Google’s rules, “unauthorized scraping or downloading of YouTube content” is not allowed, Matt Bryant, a spokesperson for Google, told NYT, also saying that the company was unaware of any such use by OpenAI.
The report, however, claims there were people at Google who knew but did not take action against OpenAI because Google was using YouTube videos to train its own AI models. Google told NYT it only does so with videos from creators who have agreed to this. Engadget has reached out to Google and OpenAI for comment.
The NYT report also claims Google asked a team to tweak its privacy policy in June 2023 to more broadly cover its use of publicly available content, including Google Docs and Google Sheets, to train its AI models and products. The changes, which Google says were made for clarity’s sake, were published in July. Bryant told NYT that this type of data is only used with the permission of users who opt into Google’s experimental features tests, and that the company “did not start training on additional types of data based on this language change.” The change added Bard as an example of what that data might be used for.
Correction, April 6, 2024, 3:45PM ET: This story originally stated that Google updated its privacy policy in June 2022. The policy update was actually made in 2023. We apologize for the error.
This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/openai-and-google-reportedly-used-transcriptions-of-youtube-videos-to-train-their-ai-models-163531073.html?src=rss
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OpenAI and Google reportedly used transcriptions of YouTube videos to train their AI models
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Microsoft makes major quantum computing breakthrough — development of most stable qubits might actually make the technology viable for many, but will anyone be able to afford it?
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Epic Mint Mobile deal: get an unlimited plan for $15/mo plus a second line free