All’s fair in love and AI
Most people outside of Silicon Valley can recognize a hierarchy in the value of artificial intelligence. At best, it produces a similar effect to the 19th-century invention of the dishwasher: It does the grunt work humans don’t like to free them for more creative or enjoyable tasks. But now AI seems to be taking over the creative world, with major newspapers inadvertently permitting AI-hallucinated books to slip into their summer reading lists and talent agencies vying to sign Tilly Norwood, a young British actress who doesn’t really exist. Yes, you guessed it: She’s AI, too.
The AI creep continues. Worse than overtaking the arts, it’s now hoping to encroach upon a more intimate space: your bedroom. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced on X this week that at the end of the year, “as part of our ‘treat adult users like adults’ principle,”........
© Washington Examiner
