Monday, May 20, 2024
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says the AI revolution should face regulations like airlines by an "international agency" to avert global harm to humanity News - Kevin Okemwam, Windows Central
Navigating the future of work: A case for a robot tax in the age of AI - Michael J. Ahn, Brookings
Sunday, May 19, 2024
Google 3D calls coming in 2025 - Martin Crowly, AI Tools Report
Google takes on GPT-4o with Project Astra, an AI agent that understands dynamics of the world - Shubham Sharma, Venture Beat
Saturday, May 18, 2024
2024 EDUCAUSE Horizon Report | Teaching and Learning Edition - EDUCAUSE
Element451 Introduces Gen AI Assistants for Higher Education - Kate Lucariello, Campus Technology
Friday, May 17, 2024
Superhuman? What does it mean for AI to be better than a human? And how can we tell? - Ethan Mollick, One Useful Thing
No matter what happens next, today, as anyone who uses AI knows, we do not have an AI that does every task better than a human, or even most tasks. But that doesn’t mean that AI hasn’t achieved superhuman levels of performance in some surprisingly complex jobs, at least if we define superhuman as better than most humans, or even most experts. What makes these areas of superhuman performance interesting is that they are often for very “human” tasks that seem to require empathy and judgement. For example: If you debate with an AI, they are 87% more likely to persuade you to their assigned viewpoint than if you debate with an average human. GPT-4 helps people reappraise a difficult emotional situation better than 85% of humans, beating human advice-givers on the effectiveness, novelty, and empathy of their reappraisal.
TikTok Starts Automatically Labeling AI-Produced Synthetic Media - ERIC HAL SCHWARTZ, Voicebot.ai
Thursday, May 16, 2024
Professors Worry About ‘Digital Surveillance’ of Their Work - Jack Grove, Inside Higher Ed
More than eight in 10 professors say universities’ excessive use of digital technologies is harming academic freedom, according to a survey of academics in the United Kingdom. The poll of more than 2,000 scholars conducted for the University and College Union (UCU), which represents 120,000 faculty and staff members in the U.K., highlights growing unease over the digital tools commonly used in academe, such as the virtual learning environments used to facilitate teaching, electronic systems to evaluate teaching performance and metrics-based systems such as SciVal that enable managers to scrutinize research publications and citations.