Author: IBL News

  • Attackers Distribute Malware Using Fake ChatGPT-Related Websites

    Attackers Distribute Malware Using Fake ChatGPT-Related Websites

    IBL News | New York

    AI bad actors have shown up. Attackers distributing malware posing as ChatGPT are on the rise across Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp. Many of them are in Vietnam.

    They set up fake websites that claim to offer ChatGPT-based tools and promote malicious extensions on social media through sponsored search results to trick people into downloading malware. See the example below.

    Their ultimate goal is to compromise businesses with access to ad accounts across the internet.

    Meta/Facebook said that there are ten malware families, including Ducktail, to deliver malicious software.

    Two Meta/Facebook engineers shared their latest work to detect and disrupt malware campaigns targeting business users across the Internet.

    “Malicious groups behind malware campaigns are extremely persistent, and we fully expect them to keep trying to come up with new tactics and tooling in an effort to survive disruptions by any one platform where they spread,” they said.

    “We encourage people to be cautious when downloading new software like browser extensions or mobile apps, or downloading files across the internet.”
    .

  • edX.org Releases Six Free, Short, Online Courses About ChatGPT

    edX.org Releases Six Free, Short, Online Courses About ChatGPT

    IBL News | New York

    2U’s edX.org released six ChatGPT-related courses this month.

    These are one-to-two hours, self-paced, free courses, designed to educate audiences in the characteristics and opportunities around the new technologies pioneered by OpenAI.

    These online classes have been developed in partnership with IBL Education, an AI software development company and course production studio based in New York.

    The led instructor is IBL’s CTO, Miguel Amigot II. The production took place at the company’s film and video production studio in Brooklyn, New York.

    • Introduction to ChatGPT
      This course provides a practical introduction to ChatGPT, from signing up to mastering its advanced features. Topics covered include conversing with ChatGPT, customizing it, using it for productivity, and building chatbots, as well as advanced applications like language translation and generating creative content. Best practices and tips for using ChatGPT are also included. To date, the course has attracted over 18,200 enrollments.
    • Prompt Engineering and Advanced ChatGPT
      This course is designed to teach advanced techniques in ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence chatbot developed by OpenAI and launched in November 2022. It covers advanced techniques for prompting ChatGPT, applications for multiple use cases, integrating it with other tools, and developing applications on top while considering its limitations.
    • How to Use ChatGPT in Tech/Coding/Data
      In this course, users will learn how to harness the power of ChatGPT to revolutionize their coding process. From ideation to testing and debugging, ChatGPT can generate code programmatically, saving valuable time and energy.
    • How to Use ChatGPT in Education
      This course is designed for students and instructors to explore the many ways that ChatGPT can be used to enhance the learning experience.
    • How to Use ChatGPT in Business
      This course is designed to introduce learners to the world of ChatGPT and how it can transform various aspects of business operations and take businesses to the next level.
    • How to Use ChatGPT in Healthcare
      This course explores AI’s impact and transformation in healthcare. It shows ChatGPT use cases, navigate ethics and legalities, and streamlines patient care, data access, and administration.

  • Harvard University’s CS50 Online Course Will Add AI Teacher Assistants

    Harvard University’s CS50 Online Course Will Add AI Teacher Assistants

    IBL News | New York

    The edX.org’s CS50 course, taught by Harvard University’s Professor David J. Malan, will use virtual TAs to grade assignments, teach and provide feedback on coding, and personalize learning tips.

    In terms of pedagogy, this AI assistant will ask rhetorical questions and offer suggestions rather than simply catch errors and fix coding bugs.

    “Providing support tailored to students’ specific questions has been a challenge at scale, with so many more students online than teachers,” said Malan to Fortune Magazine. “AI is just hugely enabling in education.” 

    CS50 (Computer Science 50) was originally an introductory class on computing but has now evolved into multiple classes with 4.7 million people enrolled, 1.4 million YouTube subscribers, and branded merchandise.
    .

  • Apple Unveiled AI Features, But No Mention of Chatbots

    Apple Unveiled AI Features, But No Mention of Chatbots

    IBL News | New York

    On its annual developer’s conference WWDC on June 5, in Cupertino, California, Apple announced how much work it’s doing in AI and machine learning but it didn’t introduce any product or service related to Generative AI and chatbots, as Microsoft, Google, Adobe, and other large companies recently did.

    It’s Apple’s way: a practical approach to AI with features, including an improved autocorrect tool running on the iPhone based on machine learning.

    Nonetheless, Apple’s new augmented reality headset, Vision Pro, attracted worldwide attention despite its high price tag of $3,500.

    Apple wants AI models on its devices, unlike its rivals who are building large data farms and supercomputers. As a product company, Apple mentions the feature and says that there is cool technology working behind the scenes.

    One example of this was an announced improvement to AirPods Pro that automatically turns off noise cancelling when the user engages in conversation. Apple didn’t frame it as a machine learning or AI-based solution.

    Another feature: Apple’s new Digital Persona, a feature that makes a 3D scan of the user’s face and body and then can recreate what they look like virtually while videoconferencing with other people while wearing the Vision Pro headset.

    Apple also mentioned other new features that used the company’s skill in neural networks, such as the ability to identify fields to fill out in a PDF or a feature that enables the iPhone to identify your pet, versus other cats or dogs, and put all the user’s pet photos in a folder.

    CNBC: I tried the Apple Vision Pro mixed-reality headset — here’s what it’s like

  • The U.S. Department of Education Highlights the Opportunities to Work with AI Tools

    The U.S. Department of Education Highlights the Opportunities to Work with AI Tools

    IBL News | New York

    The U.S. Department of Education outlined in a report its view about opportunities for using AI to improve education while fully rejecting the idea that AI could replace teachers.

    The report notes that AI assistants will be able to automate tasks, freeing up teacher time for interacting with students and providing instant feedback for students like a free-to-use tutor.

    “AI often arrives in new applications with the aura of magic, but educators and procurement policies require that edtech show efficacy. AI may provide information that appears authentic, but actually is inaccurate or lacking a basis in reality,” states the Department.

    “It is imperative to address AI in education now to realize key opportunities, prevent and mitigate emergent risks, and tackle unintended consequences.”

    The Education Department’s report is the result of a collaboration with the nonprofit Digital Promise, based on listening sessions with 700 stakeholders in education.

    • Full report: Artificial Intelligence and the Future of Teaching and Learning (PDF)

  • Asana Makes Enterprise AI Capabilities Core to Its Management Platform

    Asana Makes Enterprise AI Capabilities Core to Its Management Platform

    IBL News | New York

    Work management platform Asana, Inc. (NYSE: ASAN) joined the generative AI scene and announced its latest product capabilities this week.

    In addition to the classical features such as a writing assistant, summarizer, and ask-anything features, Asana added these AI capabilities for goal-based resource management and self-optimizing workflows.

    The platform monitors and surfaces resource recommendations based on team capacity and changing business needs to accelerate decision-making.

    The San Francisco, CA – headquartered company made these AI capabilities available to customers in a closed beta and added a waitlist for a live demo.

    With goal-based resource management, Asana’s AI functionalities — powered by OpenAI — monitor and intelligently surfaces resource recommendations.

    “Asana was made for this moment. Asana Intelligence makes enterprise AI capabilities core to Asana’s work management platform, powering organizations to accelerate decision-making, improve productivity, and focus on what matters,” said Dustin Moskovitz, Co-Founder, and Chief Executive Officer at Asana.
    .

     

     

  • Mark Zuckerberg Opted for an Open Source Strategy to Face Google, Open AI, and Microsoft

    Mark Zuckerberg Opted for an Open Source Strategy to Face Google, Open AI, and Microsoft

    IBL News | New York

    Mark Zuckerberg, Meta’s Founder and CEO, believes that the smartest strategy on AI is to share as open-source software its underlying AI engines as a way to spread its influence and ultimately move faster toward the future, according to an article in The New York Times this week.

    In February, Meta, the parent company of Facebook, Instagram, and WhatsApp, decided to give away its A.I. crow jewel technology, called LLaMA, providing outsiders with everything they needed to quickly build chatbots of their own.

    “The platform that will win will be the open one,” Yann LeCun, Meta’s chief A.I. scientist, said in an interview.

    Meta’s actions contrast with those of Google and OpenAI. These two companies, currently at the forefront of the new AI arms race, are very secretive about the methods and software that underpin their AI products. They argue that it’s because they’re worried that AI chatbots will be used to spread disinformation, hate speech, and other toxic content. Therefore, they label the open-source approach as dangerous.

    Meanwhile, Meta says that the growing secrecy at Google and OpenAI, is a “huge mistake,” “Consumers and governments will refuse to embrace AI unless it is outside the control of these companies.”

    The history of technology has seen battles between open-source and proprietary, or closed, systems.

    Most recently, Google open-sourced the Android mobile operating system to take on Apple’s dominance in smartphones.

    While Google, Microsoft, and OpenAI have since received most of the attention in AI, Meta has also invested in the technology for nearly a decade. The company has spent billions of dollars building the software and the hardware needed to realize chatbots and other “generative AI,” which produce text, images, and other media on their own.

    According to The Times, Mark Zuckerberg is focused on making his company an A.I. leader, holding weekly meetings on the topic with his executive team and product leaders.

    Meta’s LLaMA release was significant because analyzing all that data typically requires hundreds of specialized computer chips and tens of millions of dollars, resources most companies do not have.

    At Stanford University, researchers used Meta’s new technology to build their own AI system, which was made available on the internet. When they realized that their system was being used to spread disinformation and toxic content, they promptly removed the AI system from the internet.

    For Meta, more people using open-source software can also level the playing field as it competes with OpenAI, Microsoft, and Google.

    If every software developer in the world builds programs using Meta’s tools, it could help entrench the company for the next wave of innovation, staving off potential irrelevance.

  • Google Prepares the Launch of a New Colab AI Tool, with Similar Features to GitHub Co-Pilot

    Google Prepares the Launch of a New Colab AI Tool, with Similar Features to GitHub Co-Pilot

    IBL News | New York

    Google plans to release soon, initially in the U.S. for paid users, its new code generation Colab, with added AI coding features like code completions, natural language to code generation, and a code-assisting chatbot.

    The tool will use Codey, a family of code models built on PaLM 2, announced at I/O Google’s event recently.

    Fine-tuned on a large dataset of permissively licensed code from external sources, Codey has been customized especially for Python and for Colab-specific uses.

    Over seven million people already use Colab, which is free of charge, as a software tool for machine learning, data analysis, and education.

    “Natural language to code generation helps users to generate larger blocks of code, writing whole functions from comments or prompts; the goal here is to reduce the need for writing repetitive code,” said Google in a blog-post.

    “Access to these features will roll out gradually in the coming months, starting with our paid subscribers in the U.S. and then expanding into the free-of-charge tier. We’ll also expand into other geographies over time.”

    Twitter’s account @googlecolab is the main source of announcements about releases and launches.
    .

  • Meta Will Provide Generative AI for Advertisers in Instagram or Facebook

    Meta Will Provide Generative AI for Advertisers in Instagram or Facebook

    IBL News | New York

    Meta, formerly known as Facebook, announced an AI Sandbox for advertisers to help them improve their ad performance for businesses and spend less time and resources on repurposing creative assets.

    This AI Sandbox testing background, announced last week, will allow the creation of different variations of the same copy for different audiences, background generation through text prompts, and image cropping in different aspect ratios for Instagram or Facebook posts, stories, or short videos like Reels.

    These features, are available today to select advertisers and it will gradually expand to more in July, according to the company.

    These features, called Meta Advantage, are available today to select advertisers, and they will gradually expand to more advertisers in July, according to the company

    Currently, some startups such as Omneky and Movio are leaning toward DALLE-2, GPT-3, and other generative AI-powered ad tools and marketing videos for advertisers.

  • Sam Altman and Other Giants Say that AI Could Be as Deadly as Pandemics and Nuclear Weapons

    Sam Altman and Other Giants Say that AI Could Be as Deadly as Pandemics and Nuclear Weapons

    IBL News | New York

    Hundreds of AI scientists, academics, tech CEOs, and public figures, including OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis, added their names to a one-sentence statement urging global attention to existential AI risk.

    The statement, hosted on the website of a San Francisco-based, privately-funded not-for-profit called the Center for AI Safety (CAIS), states:

    “Mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war.”

    A short explainer on CAIS’ website explained that the statement has mostly been kept succinct to overcome the obstacle and open up discussion.

    “It is also meant to create common knowledge of the growing number of experts and public figures who also take some of advanced AI’s most severe risks seriously,” stated the site.

    In the last two months, policymakers have actually heard the self-same concerns, as AI hype has surged off the back of expanded access to generative AI tools like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and DALL-E.

    In March, Elon Musk and many other experts released an open letter calling for a six-month pause on the development of AI models more powerful than OpenAI’s GPT-4. This pause would allow for buying time for shared safety protocols to be devised and applied to advanced AI.