Artificial Intelligence

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Highlights

  1. How A.I. Tools Could Change India’s Elections

    Avatars are addressing voters by name, in whichever of India’s many languages they speak. Experts see potential for misuse in a country already rife with disinformation.

     By

    CreditAhmer Khan for The New York Times
  2. The SHifT

    A.I. Has a Measurement Problem

    Which A.I. system writes the best computer code or generates the most realistic image? Right now, there’s no easy way to answer those questions.

     By

    CreditDavide Comai
  1. A.I. Made These Movies Sharper. Critics Say It Ruined Them.

    Machine-learning technologies are being used in film restoration for new home video releases. But some viewers strongly dislike the results.

     By

    Credit20th Century Fox
  2. Teen Girls Confront an Epidemic of Deepfake Nudes in Schools

    Using artificial intelligence, middle and high school students have fabricated explicit images of female classmates and shared the doctored pictures.

     By

    After boys at Francesca Mani’s high school fabricated and shared explicit images of girls last year, she and her mother, Dorota, began urging schools and legislators to enact tough safeguards.
    CreditShuran Huang
  3. A.I. Could Spot Breast Cancer Earlier. Should You Pay for It?

    The new add-on to a standard mammogram can cost between $40 and $100. We asked experts to separate the sales pitch from the science.

     By

    CreditGetty Images
  4. How Tech Giants Cut Corners to Harvest Data for A.I.

    OpenAI, Google and Meta ignored corporate policies, altered their own rules and discussed skirting copyright law as they sought online information to train their newest artificial intelligence systems.

     By Cade MetzCecilia KangSheera FrenkelStuart A. Thompson and

    Researchers at OpenAI’s office in San Francisco developed a tool to transcribe YouTube videos to amass conversational text for A.I. development.
    CreditJason Henry for The New York Times
  5. Four Takeaways on the Race to Amass Data for A.I.

    To make artificial intelligence systems more powerful, tech companies need online data to feed the technology. Here’s what to know.

     By Cecilia KangCade Metz and

    Google, Meta and OpenAI train their artificial intelligence models on vast quantities of online data.
    CreditJim Wilson/The New York Times

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ChatGPT

More in ChatGPT ›
  1. Meta, in Its Biggest A.I. Push, Places Smart Assistants Across Its Apps

    Users of Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp and Messenger will be able to turn to the new technology, powered by Meta’s latest artificial intelligence model, to obtain information and complete tasks.

     By Mike Isaac and

    CreditMeta
  2. Most Teachers Know They’re Playing With Fire When They Use Tech in the Classroom

    But many of them know how not to get burned.

     By

    CreditEleanor Davis
  3. ¿Quieres liberarte de tu celular? Este dispositivo podría ser la clave

    El Ai Pin cuesta 700 dólares y resulta útil para ciertas tareas, pero no se le dan bien las matemáticas ni las recetas de sándwiches.

     By

    The Humane A.I. Pin.
    CreditAndri Tambunan for The New York Times
  4. Cómo los gigantes tecnológicos toman atajos para obtener datos para la IA

    OpenAI, Google y Meta ignoraron las políticas corporativas, alteraron sus propias normas y debatieron la posibilidad de eludir la ley de derechos de autor en la búsqueda de información en línea para entrenar sus sistemas de inteligencia artificial más recientes.

     By Cade MetzCecilia KangSheera FrenkelStuart A. Thompson and

    Investigadores de la oficina de OpenAI en San Francisco desarrollaron una herramienta para transcribir videos de YouTube con el fin de acumular texto conversacional para el desarrollo de IA.
    CreditJason Henry para The New York Times
  5. Europe’s A.I. ‘Champion’ Sets Sights on Tech Giants in U.S.

    Mistral, a French start-up considered a promising challenger to OpenAI and Google, is getting support from European leaders who want to protect the region’s culture and politics.

     By Liz Alderman and

    “The issue with not having a European champion is that the road map gets set by the United States,” Mr. Mensch said.
    CreditDmitry Kostyukov for The New York Times

On Tech: AI Newsletter

More in On Tech: AI Newsletter ›
  1. Applying to College? Here’s How A.I. Tools Might Hurt, or Help.

    ChatGPT might change the application essay forever.

     By

    CreditKendrick Brinson for The New York Times
  2. How teachers and students feel about A.I.

    As the school year begins, their thinking has evolved.

     By

    CreditSam Wood
  3. How to Use A.I. for Family Time

    Plan meals, find gifts and create stories using generative A.I.

     

    CreditTess Smith-Roberts
  4. What’s the Future for A.I.?

    Where we’re heading tomorrow, next year and beyond.

     By

    CreditMathieu Labrecque
  5. How Should I Use A.I. Chatbots Like ChatGPT?

    Large language models are already good at a wide variety of tasks.

     By

    CreditIllustrations by Mathieu Labrecque

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  3. DealBook Newsletter

    How Washington Played A.I. Matchmaker

    The White House laid the ground work for Microsoft’s $1.5 billion investment in an Emirati artificial intelligence start-up, a deal meant to box out Beijing.

    By Andrew Ross Sorkin, Ravi Mattu, Bernhard Warner, Sarah Kessler, Michael J. de la Merced, Lauren Hirsch and Ephrat Livni

     
  4. A.I.’s Original Sin

    A Times investigation found that tech giants altered their own rules to train their newest artificial intelligence systems.

    By Michael Barbaro, Cade Metz, Stella Tan, Michael Simon Johnson, Mooj Zadie, Rikki Novetsky, Marc Georges, Liz O. Baylen, Diane Wong, Dan Powell, Pat McCusker and Chris Wood

     
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