Yes that is very awesome and I really like that idea! Great job with thinking that up!!
AI... A new dawn, or the demise of humanity ?
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And now, if this this doesn’t creep you out, I don’t know what will.
Don’t share your kids personal information - Without Consent - Deutsche Telekom Deepfake AI Ad
WARNING: This video contains content that some viewers may find disturbing.
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@phenomlab wow that is very sad… they should add something like this to the handlers, so the moment it touchs human flesh, it stops immediately
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@crazycells Yes, you seriously have to wonder about the existence of health and safety controls. That specific machine shouldn’t have even been powered on!
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@crazycells That is an incredible creation. 5000 RPM, yet stops on 1/1000th of a second? I guess the only downside is that the saw blade and module are destroyed by the 10G impact, but given the $60 price tag, it’s effectively nothing.
And the fact that this guy is willing to use himself as a demo means he has every faith in his own creation, and there aren’t many people who can claim that.
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@phenomlab I agree, actually it was the first time I have seen someone using their finger, previously I only saw similar videos with hot dog sausage as finger.
$60 is definitely no brainer. According to US congress, a human life worths $10 million, if financing a regulation is less than $10 million per life it will save, the proposition can pass as a law.
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@phenomlab I wonder the specifics…
Article does not give much info except this paragraph…
Generative AI systems such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT have become increasingly ubiquitous in recent months - wowing users with their ability to create text, photos and songs but also causing concerns around jobs, privacy and copyright protection.
So, I guess it is mostly related to copyright protection and privacy etc.
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@crazycells it does seem that way, yes. Although Sky News frequently update their articles so worth checking back periodically.
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@crazycells I think the most concerning part of that article is this
Officials provided few details on what will make it into the eventual law, which will not take effect until 2025 at the earliest.
If that truly is the case, then how do we gain any comfort that what does make it into law is for for purpose?
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@phenomlab I think this is thought to be main frame and base for future rather than comprehensive instructions. I wonder if it will change anything at all…
By the way, aren’t most of these AI repo open source? So anyone can use it the way they want?.. It is like saying “do not share copyrighted material” but they cannot prevent piracy… So, I guess it will be something similar with AI… I mean people will use the copyrighted books to train their algorithm and will not acknowledge this…
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@crazycells yes, I think so too. But, even frameworks require some form of basis and to not provide even a synopsis of that makes me wonder if it even exists yet.
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This is interesting. Who knew that Deep Fake images also were the victim of poor Photoshop skills
On a serious note, these AI generated images can be hugely damaging. Just look at the amount of times these fake images have been shared across social media sites. They say a picture speaks a thousand words - yet in this case, none of those words would have any true bearing or be factual.
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@phenomlab I agree… as once one of the greatest AI, internet and technology expert Abraham said…
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@phenomlab I guess there might be ways to solve this problem…
Most logical way is that people should stop using social media as news site… But we all know that this will never happen… So, easiest solution could be tagging each shared caps or photo on the picture (not in the instructions) as “real”, “art”, “satire”, “ai-made” etc…
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@crazycells Exactly. A great analogy.
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@crazycells Great ideas, but people read news outside of social media?
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@phenomlab not anymore… lol…
that is why those sites should mark each photos/caps etc.
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Oh dear. This was only a matter of time and when rather than “if”