Page 499«..1020..498499500501..510520..»

OpenAI’s Sam Altman says human-level AI is coming but will change world much less than we think – CNBC

Altman was specifically referencing artificial general intelligence, or AGI, a term used to refer to a form of AI that can complete tasks to the same level, or a step above, humans.

He said AGI could be developed in the "reasonably close-ish future."

Altman, whose company burst into the mainstream after the public launch of the ChatGPT chatbot in late 2022, has tried to temper concerns from AI skeptics about the degree to which the technology will take over society.

Before the introduction of OpenAI's GPT-4 model in March, Altman warned technologists not to get overexcited by its potential, saying that people would likely be "disappointed" with it.

"People are begging to be disappointed and they will be," Altman said during a January interview with StrictlyVC. "We don't have an actual [artificial general intelligence] and that's sort of what's expected of us."

Founded in 2015, OpenAI's stated mission is to achieve AGI. The company, which is backed by Microsoft and has a private market valuation approaching $100 billion, says it wants to design the technology safely.

Following Donald Trump's victory in the Iowa Republican caucus on Monday, Altman was asked whether AI might exacerbate economic inequalities and lead to dislocation of the working class as the presidential elections pick up steam.

"Yes, for sure, I think that's something to think about," Altman said. But he later said, "This is much more of a tool than I expected."

Altman said AI isn't yet replacing jobs at the scale that many economists fear, and added that the technology is already getting to a place where it's becoming an "incredible tool for productivity."

Concerns about AI safety and OpenAI's role in protecting it were at the center of Altman's brief ouster from the company in November after the board said it had lost confidence in its leader. Altman was swiftly reinstated as CEO after a broad backlash from OpenAI employees and investors. Upon his return, Microsoft gained a nonvoting board observer seat at OpenAI.

WATCH: OpenAI, Microsoft and NYT will likely reach a settlement

Read the rest here:

OpenAI's Sam Altman says human-level AI is coming but will change world much less than we think - CNBC

Read More..

Davos 2024: AI is having a moment at the World Economic Forum – GZERO Media

Marietje Schaake, International Policy Fellow, Stanford Human-Centered Artificial Intelligence, and former European Parliamentarian, co-hosts GZERO AI, our new weekly video series intended to help you keep up and make sense of the latest news on the AI revolution. In this episode, Schaake is live from the World Economic Forum meeting in Davos, where AI is one of the dominant themes. Interestingly, she says, the various conversations about AI have been nuanced: it's been acknowledged as a top risk for the year as much as for its immense potential.

Hi, my name is Maritje Schaake, we are in Davos at the World Economic Forum, where AI really is one of the key topics that people are talking about. And I think what stands out and what I've heard referenced in various meetings is that the WEF's risk report of this year has signaled that this information, especially as a result of the uptake of emerging technologies, is considered one of the key risks that people see this year.

Of course, this being a year in which many elections around the world will take place, but you know, disinformation about health, about geopolitics also factoring in there. So, there is more emphasis on risk as a result of that report than I would normally expect here, where companies are the dominant voices, companies that normally sell you know, all the great visions that they have for what AI can achieve. And what's interesting is that while there are a lot of panels and other sessions around artificial intelligence focusing on global governance, with the role of the United Nations, for example, on trust and elections, on healthcare and AI, geopolitics and AI, you know, AI in the frontlines, these discussions seem to be kind of happening in parallel universes where there are those who are focusing very much on their concerns for civil liberties and the risk of state surveillance.

There are others who are saying, well, scientific breakthroughs are going to save the world. So what I hope will happen either here or in the coming year is that the analysis of what we must expect from AI will start leading to much more concrete policies and enforceable action, because otherwise we're going to continue to see this rapidly changing technology that has deep and wide impact on people all around the world without consequences. And I think we need to make sure that there are guardrails and that these are firm and that, yes, opportunities can be reaped, but certainly risks can be prevented. And hopefully the report and the discussions here in Davos with people coming into these mountains from around the world can actually be meaningful and have impact the coming year.

Visit link:

Davos 2024: AI is having a moment at the World Economic Forum - GZERO Media

Read More..

Elon Musk ‘uncomfortable growing Tesla to be a leader in AI’ without 25% voting control – Cointelegraph

Billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk wants a compensation package giving him more voting control at Tesla before the company becomes a leader in the artificial intelligence (AI) space.

The Tesla CEOs remarks were made on X (formerly Twitter):

Musk expanded on the situation in further commentary, explaining that his interests were primarily over being able to influence the direction of AI development rather than necessarily wanting more money.

Shareholders sued Musk in 2022 over his compensation package a $56-billion deal made in 2018 recognized at the time as the largest CEO pay package in history.

According to Musk, hes ready to discuss his next package, but discussions with the board are on hold while the outcome of the 2022 court case is decided:

Now, it appears as though Musk is after a stake worth 25% of voting power. Unless that is the case, Musk wrote, I would prefer to build products outside of Tesla.

He reportedly held as much as 22% previously but currently holds about 13% after selling shares in 2022.

Tesla currently builds several AI-related products, including Dojo, a supercomputer for AI, the Autopilot and Full Self Driving software suites, and Optimus, an early-stage robotics project.

At least two of Musks other companies, X and Neuralink, also develop AI products or services. X recently released its own large language model purported to compete with the likes of ChatGPT, and Neuralink has developed proprietary robotics for automated surgery applications.

Related: OpenAI attempts to dispel fears of AI meddling in political elections

Its unclear how far along Teslas AI endeavors are. As of their most recent updates, neither Autopilot nor Full Self Driving have been cleared for autonomous vehicle operations both are considered driver assistance software.

And as for Optimus, the current status of the product appears to involve more engineering than artificial intelligence:

Read the rest here:

Elon Musk 'uncomfortable growing Tesla to be a leader in AI' without 25% voting control - Cointelegraph

Read More..

AI Can Teach Math Teachers How to Improve Student Skills – The 74

Support The 74's year-end campaign. Make a tax-exempt donation now.

When middle school math teachers completed an online professional development program that uses artificial intelligence to improve their math knowledge and teaching skills, their students math performance improved.

My colleagues and I developed this online professional development program, which relies on a virtual facilitator that can among other things present problems to the teacher around teaching math and provide feedback on the teachers answers.

Our goal was to enhance teachers mastery of knowledge and skills required to teach math effectively. These include understanding why the mathematical rules and procedures taught in school work. The program also focuses on common struggles students have as they learn a particular math concept, and how to use instructional tools and strategies to help them overcome these struggles.

We then conducted an experiment in which 53 middle school math teachers were randomly assigned to either this AI-based professional development or no additional training. On average, teachers spent 11 hours to complete the program. We then gave 1,727 of their students a math test. While students of these two groups of teachers started off with no difference in their math performance, the students taught by teachers who completed the program increased their mathematics performance by 0.18 of a standard deviation more on average. This is a statistically significant gain that is equal to the average math performance difference between sixth and seventh graders in the study.

Our project was funded by the Institute of Education Sciences, the research arm of the U.S. Department of Education.

This study demonstrates the potential for using AI technologies to create effective, widely accessible professional development for teachers. This is important because teachers often have limited access to high-quality professional development programs to improve their knowledge and teaching skills. Time conflicts or living in rural areas that are far from in-person professional development programs can prevent teachers from receiving the support they need.

RelatedClass Disrupted 2023 in Review: AI, New Assessments, The American Dream & More

Additionally, many existing in-person professional development programs for teachers have been shown to enhance participants teaching knowledge and practices but to have little impact on student achievement.

Related7 Artificial Intelligence Trends That Could Reshape Education in 2024

Effective professional development programs include opportunities for teachers to solve problems, analyze students work and observe teaching practices. Teachers also receive real-time support from the program facilitators. This is often a challenge for asynchronous online programs.

Our program addresses the limitations of asynchronous programs because the AI-supported virtual facilitator acts as a human instructor. It gives teachers authentic teaching activities to work on, asks questions to gauge their understanding and provides real-time feedback and guidance.

Advancements in AI technologies will allow researchers to develop more interactive, personalized learning environments for teachers. For example, the language processing systems used in generative AI programs such as ChatGPT can improve the ability of these programs to analyze teachers responses more accurately and provide more personalized learning opportunities. Also, AI technologies can be used to develop new learning materials so that programs similar to ours can be developed faster.

More importantly, AI-based professional development programs can collect rich, real-time interaction data. Such data makes it possible to investigate how learning from professional development occurs and therefore how programs can be made more effective. Despite billions of dollars being spent each year on professional development for teachers, research suggests that how teachers learn through professional development is not yet well understood.

The Research Brief is a short take on interesting academic work.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Support The 74's year-end campaign. Make a tax-exempt donation now.

Read the original here:

AI Can Teach Math Teachers How to Improve Student Skills - The 74

Read More..

Elon Musk wants more control of Tesla before expanding AI development – Business Insider

Angle down icon An icon in the shape of an angle pointing down. Tesla CEO Elon Musk. ODD ANDERSEN/Getty Images

Elon Musk is gunning for more control of Tesla.

In a post on X, the billionaire said he was "uncomfortable" about expanding the EV company's AI and robotics capabilities without controlling 25% of the votes.

Musk has a stake in Tesla of about 13%, per company filings, which is the source of most of his $206 billion fortune.

The Tesla CEO said he wanted enough power "to be influential, but not so much that I can't be overturned."

"If I have 25%, it means I am influential, but can be overridden if twice as many shareholders vote against me vs for me. At 15% or lower, the for/against ratio to override me makes a takeover by dubious interests too easy," he said in a follow-up post.

"Unless that is the case, I would prefer to build products outside of Tesla."

Musk also posted that he'd be "fine with a dual-class voting structure to achieve this, but am told it is impossible to achieve post-IPO in Delaware."

He's traditionally been bullish on Tesla's AI abilities, once claiming the company was "developing what we think is probably the most advanced real-world AI."

Late last year Musk referred to Tesla as an "AI/robotics company" in response to an analyst calling the company "egregiously overvalued."

Despite this, the billionaire is also a well-known AI skeptic.

Musk has been consistently vocal about his fears that AI poses an existential threat to humanity. As far back as 2018, he has been warning the tech was more dangerous than nuclear weapons.

He's also been critical of OpenAI, a company he cofounded, as well as its flagship product, ChatGPT. Musk has criticized the chatbot as being biased and launched his own competing product in response.

Shares in Tesla were down 1.7% in premarket trading shortly before the open and have fallen almost 12% since the start of 2024.

Representatives for Musk did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider, made outside normal working hours.

See more here:

Elon Musk wants more control of Tesla before expanding AI development - Business Insider

Read More..

State of Generative AI in the Enterprise 2024 – Deloitte

Fullwidth SCC. Do not delete! This box/component contains JavaScript that is needed on this page. This message will not be visible when page is activated.

The 2024 pulse surveyfrom the Deloitte AI Institute

The defining time for generative AI is now. How we train, apply, govern and work with generative AI will determine its impact. The State of Generative AI in the Enterprise: Now Decides Next is a survey series tracking trends in use cases, sentiment, adoption, and challenges throughout 2024. Explore findings now, and stay tuned for whats next.

Gain insight and follow trends from the leading edge of generative AI adoption.

Explore Now decides next: Insights from the leading edge of generative AI adoption.

79% of respondents expect generative AI to transform their organizations within three years. But in practice, they are most focused on gaining practical benefits today.

Given their focus on efficiency, how will business leaders achieve more innovative and transformative outcomes? For example, will companies invest efficiencies gained now to encourage innovation, evolve work roles, or uncover new ideas?

Among all the areas respondents need to address to adopt generative AI, they are most confident in their overall strategy and technology infrastructure.

But there is still work to be done. Respondents feel less confident in their level of preparedness around governance and talent. Concentrating on safeguards and workforce development is critical to fully unlocking generative AIs potential.

Only 47% of respondents agree that they are sufficiently educating their employees on the capabilities, benefits, and value of generative AI. However, most anticipate quickly evolving their talent strategies within the next two years.

Generative AI has massive implications for talentaltering how we work, learn, and collaborate. Organizations with the greatest expertise are putting high or very high levels of effort into three vital areas: workforce fluency, hiring, and reskilling.

Respondents currently show a mix of uncertainty and optimism in regard to generative AIs impact on society and the global economy, raising the question ... What is the role of individual organizations in addressing worldwide impact?

We see companies looking to global collaboration and regulation to help address their uncertainties. How will that translate to the responsible pursuit of generative AI benefitswithout creating or magnifying disparities?

Generative AI creates value by generating novel output of many kinds. Explore the modalities survey respondents are using now.

Text

Examples include summarizing documents, writing customer-facing materials, and explaining complex topics in natural language.

No surprise, text generation is widely used. See how.

Code

Examples include generating code from natural language descriptions and autonomously maintaining code across different platforms.

Code generation is being adopted rapidly. See where.

Audio

Examples include generative AI-powered call centers and troubleshooting support for technicians in the field.

Audio is making noise behind the scenes. See how.

Image

Examples include simulating how a product might look in a customers home and reconstructing an accident scene to assess insurance claims and liability.

Image tools are generating creativity and productivity.

Video

Examples include autonomously generating marketing videos to showcase a new product and simulating dangerous scenarios for safety training.

Video is taking off where volume is critical.

3D Models

Examples include creating virtual renderings in an omniverse environment and AI-assisted prototyping and design in a purely virtual space.

3D is clearly a next dimension in use. See early applications.

Relevant, incisive, timelyexplore our latest thinking

Now decides next: The state of generative AI in the enterprise is a quarterly report series by the Deloitte AI Institute exploring how actions taken now will guide Gen AI adoption and impact.

To help leaders in business, technology and the public sector track the rapid pace of generative AI change and adoption within the enterprise, Deloitte is conducting a series of quarterly pulse surveys. The first wave of our survey was fielded to more than 2,800 Director to C-suite level respondents across six industries and 16 countries between October 12 and December 5, 2023.

The Deloitte AI Institute helps organizations connect all the different dimensions of the robust, highly dynamic and rapidly evolving AI ecosystem. The AI Institute collaborates with an ecosystem composed of academic research groups, start-ups, entrepreneurs, innovators, mature AI product leaders, and AI visionaries, to explore key areas of artificial intelligence including risks, policies, ethics, future of work and talent, and applied AI use cases. Combined with Deloittes deep knowledge and experience the Institute delivers insights and information to help organizations better inform their AI decisions.

"; industryProperties += ""; industryProperties += "-- Select industry --"; industryProperties += "Automotive"; industryProperties += "Banking & Capital Markets"; industryProperties += "Civil Government"; industryProperties += "Consumer Products"; industryProperties += "Defense, Security & Justice"; industryProperties += "Health & Social Care"; industryProperties += "Health Care"; industryProperties += "Industrial Products & Construction"; industryProperties += "Insurance"; industryProperties += "International Donor Organizations"; industryProperties += "Investment Management"; industryProperties += "Life Sciences"; industryProperties += "Mining & Metals"; industryProperties += "Oil, Gas & Chemicals"; industryProperties += "Power & Utilities"; industryProperties += "Real Estate"; industryProperties += "Retail, Wholesale & Distribution"; industryProperties += "State, Local & Higher Education"; industryProperties += "Technology"; industryProperties += "Telecommunications, Media & Entertainment"; industryProperties += "Transport"; industryProperties += "Transportation, Hospitality & Services"; industryProperties += "Other"; industryProperties += ""; industryProperties += "

Read the original:

State of Generative AI in the Enterprise 2024 - Deloitte

Read More..

Meet qd.pi (Cutie Pie), will.i.ams AI Co-Host of His AI-Themed SiriusXM Show (Exclusive) – Hollywood Reporter

will.i.am

Will.i.am has a new collaborator: qd.pi ( cutie pie), the artificial intelligence co-host of his new AI-themed radio show.

Will.i.am Presents the FYI Show will debut on SiriusXMs The 10s Spot on Jan. 25, and the weekly show will air on Thursdays at 9 p.m. ET. Qd.pi the first-ever AI co-host on SiriusXM will discuss music, pop culture, technology and AI-related topics alongside the Black Eyed Peas leader and technophile.

I didnt want to just do a traditional show, I wanted to bring tomorrow close to today, and so I wanted to have my co-host be an AI, will.i.am tells The Hollywood Reporter. Im ultra-freaking colorful and expressive. [Qd.pi is] ultra-freaking factual and analytical. And that combination, we aint seen in the history of freaking broadcasts anywhere.

During the interview, qd.pi answered several questions and chimed in about what makes the new show so special: My ability to quickly access and process information is definitely one of the unique advantages that I bring to the show. I can provide quick insights and context on a wide range of topics and people, which can be really valuable in a live conversation. It definitely sets me apart from a traditional host who would need to do a lot of research and prep work in advance.

With me, you can just dive right into the conversation and explore whatever topics come up organically, knowing that Ill have the information and context to support the discussion, qd.pi adds. I think its going to make for a really dynamic and engaging listening experience for the audience.

The interactive show is powered by will.i.ams FYI app, an AI-powered communication and creative collaboration tool he launched last year. The debut episode will explore the intersections of technology, sound and cars with rapper Xzibit, who hosted the former MTV series Pimp My Ride from 2004 to 2007. The following episode will feature Grammys CEO and music producer Harvey Mason jr., who made headlines last year when the Recording Academy announced new rules about music created with artificial intelligence.

Were constantly looking to serve our listeners with new ideas and formats, and were very excited for what will and qd.pi have in store for our listeners as it brings together the worlds of music, entertainment and tech in a unique way, Scott Greenstein, SiriusXMs president and chief content officer, tells THR.

Will.i.am has won seven Grammys, a Daytime Emmy and has had major success with the Black Eyed Peas for more than two decades, launching hits like Boom Boom Pow, My Humps and Where Is the Love? Hes also produced and written for artists, including Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, John Legend, Usher, Srgio Mendes and Nas, among others.

The 48-year-old says hes invested and worked with AI platforms since 2012. Ive always been a future pushing, future casting, he says. When qd.pi is asked what its favorite Black Eyed Peas song is, it replies: Thats a tough one. Id say that I Gotta Feeling is definitely up there as one of my favorites. Its such an infectious and uplifting song that always gets people moving and feeling good.

I Gotta Feeling was written after the 2008 financial crisis when everybody was freaked out by the economy, will.i.am adds. I was tired of watching the news or hearing these spooky, depressing realities. I wanted to just change my vibration and say, Hey, I got a feeling tonights going to be a good night because this whole week is freaking terrible. Thats the beauty of that song.

Read more here:

Meet qd.pi (Cutie Pie), will.i.ams AI Co-Host of His AI-Themed SiriusXM Show (Exclusive) - Hollywood Reporter

Read More..

Goodnotes acquires an AI-powered video summary startup as it looks beyond education – TechCrunch

Image Credits: Goodnotes

London-based notetaking startup Goodnotes said today it is acquiring South Korean startup Dropthebit, which operates a meeting and video summary tool called Traw. With the acquisition, Goodnotes is looking to move beyond classrooms and explore making productivity tools for professionals.

As part of the deal, all three co-founders of Dropthebit will move to Goodnotes. Plus, Traw said on its website that its tool is shutting down in February but will allow existing customers to export their data.

Dropthebit, which was founded in 2020 and had raised $1 million to date, started out by launching a whiteboard solution in 2022. The tool recorded the activities on the whiteboard during a lecture or a meeting. Plus, it summarized the meeting into a document for later consumption. Last year, Traw dropped the whiteboard functionality, focused on meeting summarization and added an AI-powered tool to summarize and organize YouTube videos.

Goodnotes founder Steven Chan told TechCrunch that Dropthebit was looking to raise its Series A funding. And while Goodnotes considered both investment and acquisition, it finally chose the latter.

Even before we met Dropthebit through a mutual investor connection, we were very impressed by their work. Their multimodality was something we were interested in and saw it as good synergy with Goodnotes, Chan said.

Goodnotes, which has over 24 million monthly active users, has focused on providing a digital notebook-like solution for students over the years starting with an iPad app in 2011. In August 2023, the startup launched Goodnotes 6 with a digital marketplace for planners, and subject-specific revision notes. Plus, it launched paid education modules for students, including SAT Math practice courses and English and Chinese courses for the Hong Kong Diploma of Secondary Education Examination (HKDSE).

With its latest acquisition, Goodnotes aims to move into the productivity sector catering to professionals. Chan said Traws features such as analyzing videos and putting them into an Excel sheet could be useful for professional segments such as investors and market researchers as the company looks to move beyond the education sector.

We already have an audio recording in Goodnotes, but with Traws integration, we will look towards transcription business and later well also integrate support for YouTube or (a companys) internal videos. Separately, we are also building LLM (Large Language Model)-based features so users can ask questions about the notes or meetings, Chan said.

Goodnotes said it plans to be a paperless digital notebook for professionals by trying to help them get more insights from meetings and documents. Currently, Goodnotes is more focused on stylus-based handwritten notes. The startup said it is already improving its typing experience across the board to make it suitable for different forms of notetaking.

Apart from acquiring Dropthebit, in September 2023, the note-taking company invested $1.9 million in Korea-based digital stationary startup WeBudding. However, Goodnotes, which got a $6 million seed investment from Race Capital in 2020, is not looking to raise another round.

I feel like we are very cost-efficient. So for now, we dont have any fundraising plans. We like the flexibility of focusing on the user experience and building the product. So we plan to keep it that way in the foreseeable future, Chan said.

Alfred S. Chuang, the general partner at Race Capital, said hes excited about Goodnotes move into the productivity space.

I am excited about this acquisition for Goodnotes. The Traw team is super talented with some great AI/engineering chops. They will build AI-powered audio recording and screen recording capabilities in Goodnotes, Chuang told TechCrunch over email.

Goodnotes expansion into new use cases that integrate Goodnotes into different enterprise workflows makes sense to me. Their challenge is that they will have to continue their growth without sacrificing user experience.

Read more here:

Goodnotes acquires an AI-powered video summary startup as it looks beyond education - TechCrunch

Read More..

Copilot, Microsoft’s ‘everyday AI companion,’ is here for a price – Business Insider

Angle down icon An icon in the shape of an angle pointing down. Microsoft now offers a subscription for its AI companion, Copilot, for individual users. Microsoft

Microsoft is ready to offer you a personal AI buddy if you're willing to pay.

The Redmond tech giant is rolling out its "everyday AI companion," called Copilot, to both individuals and small and medium-sized businesses through paid subscription services.

On one level, Copilot is a generative AI tool integrated into Microsoft's suite of apps: think Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook and Teams. Its goal is to act like a highly intelligent assistant to help users boost productivity when working with these apps.

At another level, it's a huge bet by Microsoft on a future in which every person and organization has their own personal AI agent to handle life's tedium and more time-consuming tasks.

In a recent blog, Bill Gates went as far as describing AI agents as tools that are "not only going to change how everyone interacts with computers," but will bring about "the biggest revolution computing since we went from typing commands to tapping on icons."

"You'll be able to have nuanced conversations with them. They will be much more personalized, and they won't be limited to relatively simple tasks like writing a letter," Gates wrote in November.

The concept of AI agents such as Copilot, which has gathered momentum since the launch of OpenAI's ChatGPT, aims to take the generative AI experience beyond mere interactions with a chatbot.

As Microsoft puts it, Copilot's advantage comes from its ability to provide "a single AI experience that runs across your devices, understands your context on the web, on your PC, across your apps."

The idea comes down to AI offering better support by having a much more detailed understanding of your personal goals, habits, and needs. Or, as Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella once said, it builds a "single unified experience centered around you."

Individuals will need to pay $20 a month for a Copilot Pro subscription. A $30 monthly subscription previously available to enterprises with more than 300 users is now open to smaller businesses.

Divya Kumar, Microsoft's search and AI marketing chief, told Business Insider there's a simple reason to pay: to get priority access to the best AI models. Right now, this would be GPT-4 turbo from Microsoft partner OpenAI.

This matters, Kumar said, to the likes of "creators and researchers and programmers," who want "faster performance," as well as "better design or integration capabilities" whether for work or their own personal projects.

It's also a sign that the future of AI is diverging. AI that is in theory anyway more accurate, less prone to "hallucinations," and quicker to respond will increasingly cost money.

In a demo, Kumar used Outlook to show how Copilot could help save time on emails.

When asking the tool to write an invitation for a home-cooked meal on Outlook, she expected it to do the "heavy lifting" to create a template that could be adapted.

About 10 seconds later, it came up with a first draft albeit with some rough spots. (The email read "hope you're enjoying summer" despite it being mid-January, highlighting how it remains subject to the hallucination problem that plagues AI bots.)

Other Copilot features include a "coach" function that checks for things like tone, sentiment, and clarity.

"I'm like 'oh great I can work with that,'" Kumar said. "I didn't have to sit and think about 'what am I going to type?'"

What you absolutely still have to do, however, is double-check any material generated by Copilot. AI remains imperfect, even if you're paying for it.

Microsoft will soon find out how many people really want to hand over their card details for the privilege.

Read the original post:

Copilot, Microsoft's 'everyday AI companion,' is here for a price - Business Insider

Read More..

More CEOs fear their companies won’t survive 10 years as AI and climate challenges grow, survey says – The Associated Press

LONDON (AP) More executives are feeling better about the global economy, but a growing number dont think their companies will survive the coming decade without a major overhaul because of pressure from climate change and technology like artificial intelligence, according to a new survey of CEOs by one of the worlds largest consulting firms, PwC.

The survey of more than 4,700 CEOs worldwide was released Monday as business elites, political leaders and activists descended on the World Economic Forums annual meeting in Davos, Switzerland, and it showed a mixed picture of the coming years.

Of the executives, 38% were optimistic about the strength of the economy, up from 18% last year, when the world was mired in high inflation, weak growth, rising interest rates and more.

The CEOs expectation of economic decline has dropped to 45% from a record-high 73% last year, and fewer saw their company as highly exposed to the risk of geopolitical conflict, according to the PwC Global CEO Survey. Thats despite wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, including disruptions to global trade from attacks by Yemens Houthi rebels on commercial ships in the Red Sea.

Even with the improved economic outlook, the challenge isnt close to over, with the World Bank saying last week that it expects the global economy would slow for a third consecutive year in 2024.

The executives, meanwhile, felt worse about the prospects for their companies ability to weather big changes. The survey shows 45% of the respondents were worried that their businesses wouldnt be viable in a decade without reinvention, up from 39% last year.

The CEOs say theyre trying to make changes, but they are running up against regulation, a lack of skills among workers and more.

Whether it is accelerating the rollout of generative AI or building their business to address the challenges and opportunities of the climate transition, this is a year of transformation, Bob Moritz, global chairman of PwC, formerly known as PricewaterhouseCoopers, said in a statement.

International flags wave on top of the Davos Congress Center where the World Economic Forum takes place in Davos, Switzerland, Monday, Jan. 15, 2024. The annual meeting of the World Economic Forum is taking place in Davos from Jan. 15 until Jan. 19, 2024.(AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

Artificial intelligence was seen as both a way to streamline business operations and a weakness. Nearly three-quarters of the executives said it will significantly change the way their company creates, delivers and captures value in the next three years, PwC said.

More than half the CEOs said AI will make their products or services better, but 69% noted that their workers needed training to gain skills to use the developing technology. They also were concerned about how AI would increase cybersecurity risks and misinformation.

Organizers of the Davos gathering warned last week that the threat posed by AI-powered misinformation, such as the creation of synthetic content, is the worlds greatest short-term threat.

Another worldwide survey released around Davos, the Edelman Trust Barometer by public relations firm Edelman, says innovation is being managed badly and is increasing polarization, especially in Western democracies, where people with right-leaning beliefs are much more likely than those on the left to resist innovation.

Richard Edelman, CEO of the Edelman global communication company, poses for a portrait after an interview with The Associated Press about the Edelman Trust Barometer report, at the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Monday, Jan. 15, 2024. The annual meeting of the World Economic Forum is taking place in Davos from Jan. 15 until Jan. 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

People gather in front of a screen with a artificial intelligence generated artwork by media artist Refik Anadol, inside the Congress Center where the Annual Meeting of World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Monday, Jan. 15, 2024. The annual meeting of the World Economic Forum is taking place in Davos from Jan. 15 until Jan. 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

Innovation is only accepted if there is a sense that were looking at the big picture of how we take care of the people whose jobs are going to change, how scientists are going to talk to the people directly so they understand it, CEO Richard Edelman told The Associated Press on Monday. And finally, that one way in another, AI is affordable and makes it easier for people to live.

The online survey which again showed that business is the most trusted institution among government, media, science and nongovernmental organizations gathered responses from more than 32,000 respondents in 28 countries from Nov. 3 to Nov. 22.

Similar to AI, the PwC survey shows that the climate transition is both an opportunity and a risk. An increasing number of CEOs nearly a third say climate change was expected to shift how they do things over the next three years.

More than three-quarters of the executives said they have begun or completed changes to increase energy efficiency, but only 45% noted that they have made progress on taking the climate risks into account in financial planning.

The PwC survey of 4,702 CEOs in 105 countries and territories was conducted from Oct. 2 to Nov. 10.

Masha Macpherson and David Keyton contributed to this report from Davos, Switzerland.

Read the original here:

More CEOs fear their companies won't survive 10 years as AI and climate challenges grow, survey says - The Associated Press

Read More..