The power of AI and screens

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Unreal
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Re: The power of AI and screens

Unread post by Unreal »

Just to get the spelling here in check:
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AI = Eye
(phonetical anagrams)
YouCanCallMeAl
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Re: The power of AI and screens

Unread post by YouCanCallMeAl »

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/01/ ... -use-them/

The whole thing is worth a read, but here are some hi-lights.
Furthermore, the AI development company DeepMind created an algorithm which codes very well. The system, AlphaCode can beat 72% of human coders in average competitions and recently solved about 30% of the coding problems in a highly complex coding competition against humans. Whilst this figure may seem low, this algorithm will learn exponentially – think AlphaGo which now can beat every human GO player. It is unlikely that AI will take over programming completely, but it will cut the number of humans needed to code dramatically.

If all the above are extraordinary, and they are, the arrival of Gato is the icing on the cake. Gato, which is described as a generalist agent by inventors DeepMind, is an important development because whereas currently powerful algorithms do one or two things exceedingly well, Gato can do many. This includes playing Atari, titling images, chatting with users, stacking blocks using a robotic arm and more. This development moves us away from narrow, one task, AI and into the realm of an AI being able to do multiple tasks.
So far, we have seen lower-than-expected uptake by businesses as the private sector waits for governments to establish regulations. This is likely to change as regulatory regimes like the EU AI Act, the US AI Bill of Rights and Chinese regulations come into effect.
Roll out the 'AI ethics committees' to justify the unjustifiable. Expect even more discussion of the weaponised, collectivising 'trolley problem':
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trolley_problem
This year, we can also expect more dialogue over how best to use AI in society. In some sectors, this will require difficult conversations. Law enforcement agencies, for example, are increasing the use of AI-power facial recognition systems, which have sparked widespread concern over privacy and surveillance. AI-powered weapons are also being deployed in civilian settings. The city of San Francisco, for instance, came under pressure for debating the use of lethal AI robots by law enforcement officials. Within a short time, there was such an outcry that city officials reversed their proposal, but the issue remains live and something on which all citizens should have their say.
Roll out the delphi method for the citizens.
agencies are asking the public how they feel about the use of AI by police. The feedback will inform their work to develop a Toolkit for Responsible AI Innovation in Law [T.R.I.A.L.?] Enforcement – an innovative and practical guide to support law enforcement agencies to carefully navigate this complex topic.

Above all, the fundamental question for 2023 remains not whether AI systems can be accurate and efficient, but rather how should they be used and to what degree.
napoleon
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Re: The power of AI and screens

Unread post by napoleon »

3327874-trailer_terminator2_training_20171220.jpg
we'll see
YouCanCallMeAl
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Re: The power of AI and screens

Unread post by YouCanCallMeAl »

Not screens, but headphones - a short recap of AI generated music:
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Re: The power of AI and screens

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Video did not embed

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Unreal
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Re: The power of AI and screens

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" Xpression camera is an award winning virtual camera app which allows users to instantly transform into anyone or anything with a face with a single photo without any processing time. Xpression camera enables users to redefine their onscreen persona in real-time, while chatting on apps like Zoom, live streaming on Twitch, or creating a YouTube video "

Xpression Camera - Reimagine your onscreen likeness in real time

Looking at the Xpression Camera application, i was reminded how hard it was to contend audio and voices can be altered* realistically. This wasn't long ago. Now its without contention that AI can alter video live to a bluffing degree of realism !!! Seeing is believing i guess, although we already can no longer believe what we see on any screen or print...
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One has to wonder if the public ever will suffer averse reaction to the digital onslaught we're under. When we reach the point where most people understand they can no longer make the difference between what is artificial/digital and real, there could be a general need for separation between the real and the artificial will emerge. Some type of analog craving, maybe like a certified non-AI image/video file-format or some type of real-life-encryption key?

* Voice Disguise Deception (FAK forum topic from 2018 - here)
YouCanCallMeAl
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Re: The power of AI and screens

Unread post by YouCanCallMeAl »

One has to wonder if the public ever will suffer averse reaction to the digital onslaught we're under. When we reach the point where most people understand they can no longer make the difference between what is artificial/digital and real, there could be a general need for separation between the real and the artificial will emerge.
Once it is clear it is impossible to know the truth from what one sees, for everyone no just fakeologists, if there is no change then its hard to see that there will ever be.
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Re: The power of AI and screens

Unread post by rachel »

YouCanCallMeAl wrote: Fri Jan 27, 2023 5:52 am
This year, we can also expect more dialogue over how best to use AI in society. In some sectors, this will require difficult conversations. Law enforcement agencies, for example, are increasing the use of AI-power facial recognition systems, which have sparked widespread concern over privacy and surveillance. AI-powered weapons are also being deployed in civilian settings. The city of San Francisco, for instance, came under pressure for debating the use of lethal AI robots by law enforcement officials. Within a short time, there was such an outcry that city officials reversed their proposal, but the issue remains live and something on which all citizens should have their say.
Roll out the delphi method for the citizens.
agencies are asking the public how they feel about the use of AI by police. The feedback will inform their work to develop a Toolkit for Responsible AI Innovation in Law [T.R.I.A.L.?] Enforcement – an innovative and practical guide to support law enforcement agencies to carefully navigate this complex topic.

Above all, the fundamental question for 2023 remains not whether AI systems can be accurate and efficient, but rather how should they be used and to what degree.
I'd suggest people watch BLAKES 7. Maybe not the highest budget production, but Roj Blake trial and false conviction of being a pedophile, the computer judge, everyone being locked in a city, only dissidents leaving... Pretty much the first episode has it all. Then in a later one, it gets into genetically modified people not being people. All of this fake COVID mindset, created at the BBC.



series: https://tinyurl.com/2h5a3k7c
YouCanCallMeAl
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Re: The power of AI and screens

Unread post by YouCanCallMeAl »

Not really AI, but screens:



A disappearing football player!

If you look carefully, it seems to me that he disappears twice. He flashes out for split second, then he's back, rolls around and then disappears again.
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