Starting February 13, basic access to Twitterâs API and Ads API will cost developers $100/month. Twitter this morning announced a small concession, namely a new form of limited free access. How exactly this will affect makers using the platformâs API remains unclear. Let us know how youâre impacted here.
On Monday this week, Google announced their long-awaited integration of conversational AI into search: Bard. We mentioned this in Tuesdayâs newsletter, but letâs take a closer look at what it is.
How it works: Much like ChatGPT, Bard is designed to provide synthesized answers to complex questions from multiple sources on the web in response to conversational prompts.
âSoon, youâll see AI-powered features in Search that distill complex information and multiple perspectives into easy-to-digest formats, so you can quickly understand the big picture,â said Google CEO, Sundar Pichai, in an announcement on February 6.
Right now, Bard is only available to a small group of âtrusted testersâ, but Pichai says it will be released to the public âin the coming weeks.â
Bard is powered by Googleâs Language Model for Dialogue Applications (LaMDA) â the same LaMDA ex-Google engineer Blake Lemoine last year publicly claimed was sentient, leading the company to refute these claims and fire him.
Sentient â accurate: A big conversation around Bardâs release is how slow Google has been to respond to ChatGPT, with many on Twitter teasing the tech giant for reacting to OpenAI instead of leading the way. AI makers from FAANG companies, including Google and Meta, have gone on the defense, remarking that theyâve been resistant to put out new technology without working out all the kinks (to put it lightly).
And maybe they have a point. Yesterday, astrophysicists on Twitter found a factual error in Bardâs public product demo (above), where Bard falsely claimed the James Webb Space Telescope took the first photos of an exoplanet outside our solar system. The mistake seemingly cost Alphabet Inc. (Googleâs parent company) $100 billion in market value on Wednesday.
OpenAI has taken the opposite approach: shipping fast and seeing what makers do with the technology while actively working to solve issues of accuracy, bias, and plagiarism.
When it comes to AI, are you all for playing it safe, or are you on team âship fast and break things?â
Leave your thoughts. đ
AI builders: There's a new security standard in town and you'll need to find out what it is, if you need it, and how it works.
ISO 42001 was introduced by the International Standards Organization so that companies can demonstrate their security practices around AI in a verifiable way.Join Vanta and A-LIGN in a live webinar to learn about...
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