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(The Information) Fame can be a double-edged sword—a lesson some artificial intelligence startups are learning the hard way. Read more here.
(Washington Post) When tech entrepreneur Vivek Wadhwa opened WhatsApp on Friday to talk with colleagues in India, the app popped up a message suggesting he try out its new AI chatbot, Meta AI. Wadhwa, a former Washington Post opinion contributor whose latest venture is a diagnostics start-up called Vionix Biosciences, thought he’d give it a spin. Read more here.
(Wired) Any dreams of a sweeping AI bill out of Congress are basically a hallucination. Read more here.
(Harvard Law School Forum) Only about 15% of companies in the S&P 500 provide some disclosure in proxy statements about board oversight of AI. Disclosure of board oversight of AI and directors’ AI expertise is primarily found in the information technology sector, with 38% of companies providing some level of board oversight disclosure… Read more…
(NYT) Artificial intelligence tools can replace much of Wall Street’s entry-level white-collar work, raising tough questions about the future of finance. Read more here.
(WSJ) Telecommunications company NTT and leading newspaper Yomiuri will issue a manifesto calling for new laws to restrain generative AI. Read more here.
(Ars Technica) How one journalist found himself targeted by generative AI over a keyfob photo. Read more here.
(TechCrunch) The European Union and the U.S. expect to announce a cooperation on AI at a meeting of the EU-U.S. Trade and Technology Council (TTC) on Friday, according to a senior commission official who was briefing journalists on background ahead of the confab. Read more here.
(TechCrunch) How do you get an AI to answer a question it’s not supposed to? There are many such “jailbreak” techniques, and Anthropic researchers just found a new one, in which a large language model (LLM) can be convinced to tell you how to build a bomb if you prime it with a few dozen…
(Tech Policy Press) Last month, OpenAI’s ChatGPT began responding with nonsense, and no one could explain why. The internet did its thing, and people poked fun at it, argued with each other, and then over-intellectualized what it means. Amid the chatter and the noise, an article in Fast Company by Chris Stokel-Walker titled “ChatGPT Is Behaving Weirdly (and…