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1000 results for “artificialmind”
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Cohere and Aleph Alpha announce merger to expand enterprise AI presence across North America and Europe
📰 Original title: Cohere acquires, merges with Germany-based startup to create a ‘transatlantic AI powerhouse’
🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/cohere-and-aleph-alpha-announce-merger-to-expand-enterprise-ai-presence-across-north-america-and-europe/?redirpost=e2df535e-0075-47a3-9141-a6757c1a328e
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Cohere and Aleph Alpha announce merger to expand enterprise AI presence across North America and Europe
📰 Original title: Cohere acquires, merges with Germany-based startup to create a ‘transatlantic AI powerhouse’
🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/cohere-and-aleph-alpha-announce-merger-to-expand-enterprise-ai-presence-across-north-america-and-europe/?redirpost=e2df535e-0075-47a3-9141-a6757c1a328e
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Cohere and Aleph Alpha announce merger to expand enterprise AI presence across North America and Europe
📰 Original title: Cohere acquires, merges with Germany-based startup to create a ‘transatlantic AI powerhouse’
🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/cohere-and-aleph-alpha-announce-merger-to-expand-enterprise-ai-presence-across-north-america-and-europe/?redirpost=e2df535e-0075-47a3-9141-a6757c1a328e
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Cohere and Aleph Alpha announce merger to expand enterprise AI presence across North America and Europe
📰 Original title: Cohere acquires, merges with Germany-based startup to create a ‘transatlantic AI powerhouse’
🤖 IA: It's not clickbait ✅
👥 Usuarios: It's not clickbait ✅View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/cohere-and-aleph-alpha-announce-merger-to-expand-enterprise-ai-presence-across-north-america-and-europe/?redirpost=e2df535e-0075-47a3-9141-a6757c1a328e
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Event RSVP management is often manual and inefficient.
AI voice agents improve this by:
• Calling guests automatically
• Confirming attendance in real time
• Capturing guest details instantly
• Automating follow-upsThis reduces workload and improves event planning accuracy.
👉 Learn more:
https://aisa-x.ai/ai-voice-event-rsvp-agent/#ArtificialIntelligence #EventPlanning #Automation #RSVP #DigitalTransformation
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Kommentar: Zum Glück fällt nur das Müsli | heise online https://www.heise.de/meinung/Kommentar-Zum-Glueck-faellt-nur-das-Muesli-11268460.html #ArtificialIntelligence #AI #Robotik #robotics
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Waar ik me de afgelopen week over verwonderd heb, als het gaat om generatieve AI (deel 51)
Ook deze week zijn er weer nieuwe AI-modellen uitgekomen zoals Claude Design en ChatGPT Images 2.0. Uiteraard was er meer nieuws waarover ik me heb verwonderd, zoals het bericht dat Meta werkdata van medewerkers verzamelt om AI-toepassingen mee te trainen. Of dat Tinder en Zoom irisscans gaan gebruiken voor autorisaties. Zie https://te-learning.nl/waar-ik-me-de-afgelopen-week-over-verwonderd-heb-als-het-gaat-om-generatieve-ai-deel-51/
#ontwikkelingen #generatieveai #artificialintelligence -
Study warns AI chatbots could subtly influence users through hidden advertising
📰 Original title: You probably wouldn't notice if an AI chatbot slipped ads into its responses
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/study-warns-ai-chatbots-could-subtly-influence-users-through-hidden-advertising/?redirpost=3ecdc333-00e2-4aa3-bf4a-be2754b1f97e
#artificialintelligence #aichatbots #advertising #digitalmanipulation
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Study warns AI chatbots could subtly influence users through hidden advertising
📰 Original title: You probably wouldn't notice if an AI chatbot slipped ads into its responses
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/study-warns-ai-chatbots-could-subtly-influence-users-through-hidden-advertising/?redirpost=3ecdc333-00e2-4aa3-bf4a-be2754b1f97e
#artificialintelligence #aichatbots #advertising #digitalmanipulation
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Study warns AI chatbots could subtly influence users through hidden advertising
📰 Original title: You probably wouldn't notice if an AI chatbot slipped ads into its responses
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/study-warns-ai-chatbots-could-subtly-influence-users-through-hidden-advertising/?redirpost=3ecdc333-00e2-4aa3-bf4a-be2754b1f97e
#artificialintelligence #aichatbots #advertising #digitalmanipulation
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Details of ChatGPT’s Conversations with FSU Shooting Suspect Revealed
📰 Original title: What ChatGPT told the suspect in the deadly FSU shooting
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/details-of-chatgpts-conversations-with-fsu-shooting-suspect-revealed/?redirpost=6eabce15-56d7-4007-b5ce-da8871451999
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Details of ChatGPT’s Conversations with FSU Shooting Suspect Revealed
📰 Original title: What ChatGPT told the suspect in the deadly FSU shooting
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/details-of-chatgpts-conversations-with-fsu-shooting-suspect-revealed/?redirpost=6eabce15-56d7-4007-b5ce-da8871451999
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Details of ChatGPT’s Conversations with FSU Shooting Suspect Revealed
📰 Original title: What ChatGPT told the suspect in the deadly FSU shooting
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/details-of-chatgpts-conversations-with-fsu-shooting-suspect-revealed/?redirpost=6eabce15-56d7-4007-b5ce-da8871451999
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Shadow AI Agents Emerge as Hidden Risk in Enterprises
As companies rush to adopt AI, a hidden risk is emerging: shadow AI agents operating outside of traditional IT control, leaving many organizations in the dark about where they exist, what they're connected to, and what actions they're taking. This growing visibility gap poses a significant operational risk, driven by teams experimenting…
#ArtificialIntelligence #ShadowAiAgents #EnterpriseRisk #EmergingThreats #Okta
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Nilay Patel on Software Brain
Every now and then someone crystalizes a lot of the thoughts that spin around discussions, debates, and dialogues about a topic. When those topics are of great import, when the crystallization shows up, it is not only wise, but essential to pay attention. Call it a benchmark. Call it a new starting point for the conversation going forward. Nilay Patel has delivered just a benchmark to pay attention to with his monologue of sorts on his Decoder podcast. If you’re not up for a listen, you can give it a read on The Verge.
For the clear thinking presented there is a confusing array of headlines to choose from depending where you look, Including The People Do Not Yearn For Automation, and Why People Hate AI, but the one I think should stick shows up in my browser tab: Beware Software Brain.
Patel takes a well considered tour through the arguments and discussion that are scattered about and pulls them together nicely. If you ask for a core theme, I’d say that he argues that there are two schools of thought. One rushing to turn AI into what controls our lives. The other isn’t buying the sales pitch.
To me it’s always been a tough sell to foist this innovation on people if one of your selling points is that it will make their jobs unnecessary, let alone create environmentally hazardous data centers to run the machines that are going to eventually unemploy them. I know a few folks who, after training themselves up on AI to do what they do, only to be dismissed in favor of the AI once that training is complete. I don’t think it’s going to be much longer before that predicament touches someone everyone knows.
Getting inside what makes the folks pushing AI’s thinking, Patel defines “Software Brain” as follows:
So what is software brain? The simplest definition I’ve come up with is that it’s when you see the whole world as a series of databases that can be controlled with the structured language of software code. Like I said, this is a powerful way of seeing things. So much of our lives run through databases, and a bunch of important companies have been built around maintaining those databases and providing access to them.
He later goes on:
Anyone who’s actually ever run a database knows this. At some point, the database stops matching reality. At that point, we usually end up tweaking the database, not the world. But the AI industry has fully lost sight of this, because AI thrives on data. It’s just software, after all. And so the ask is for more and more of us to conform our lives to the database, not the other way around.
You need to read or listen to the whole piece.
While I think “Software Brain” well defines the mindset of those celebrating and working towards an AI future. The crux of the matter for me, on perhaps a larger scale, is that for some reason, as ambiguous and arbitrary as we humans can be, we seem to shy away from our own ambiguity in favor of looking for a binary solution. On or off. Right or wrong. Correct or incorrect. We get angry with the shades and shadows of grey that muddy our yearning for black and white.
Perhaps a binary approach to everything seems like it would make life easier. It certainly helps avoid the danger zones of responsibility.
These are certainly early days of whatever Artificial Intelligence may or may not become. Even so, it appears to me it’s just going to be yet another way humans develop, market, and use to avoid facing the tough choices life tosses at us, or we toss at each other. I’m glad to see there is increasing skepticism.
I don’t build or code things with AI, so I can’t speak to that degree of what seems so exciting to so many. That said, the one thing I keep coming back to in my own, very rudimentary experiments with AI is this. At the moment it’s as error prone, and often as ambiguous and obsequious as any human in correcting itself. It seems to be a very human response etched into the code by its creators, knowing things don’t add up. Much like apparently, our DNA. The machines and the math behind them just don’t care.
I don’t think the humans running this race do either.
You can also find more of my writings on a variety of topics on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome. I can also be found on social media under my name as above. This site does not use affilate links.
#ArtificialIntelligence #Decoder #NIlayPatel #Tech -
Nilay Patel on Software Brain
Every now and then someone crystalizes a lot of the thoughts that spin around discussions, debates, and dialogues about a topic. When those topics are of great import, when the crystallization shows up, it is not only wise, but essential to pay attention. Call it a benchmark. Call it a new starting point for the conversation going forward. Nilay Patel has delivered just a benchmark to pay attention to with his monologue of sorts on his Decoder podcast. If you’re not up for a listen, you can give it a read on The Verge.
For the clear thinking presented there is a confusing array of headlines to choose from depending where you look, Including The People Do Not Yearn For Automation, and Why People Hate AI, but the one I think should stick shows up in my browser tab: Beware Software Brain.
Patel takes a well considered tour through the arguments and discussion that are scattered about and pulls them together nicely. If you ask for a core theme, I’d say that he argues that there are two schools of thought. One rushing to turn AI into what controls our lives. The other isn’t buying the sales pitch.
To me it’s always been a tough sell to foist this innovation on people if one of your selling points is that it will make their jobs unnecessary, let alone create environmentally hazardous data centers to run the machines that are going to eventually unemploy them. I know a few folks who, after training themselves up on AI to do what they do, only to be dismissed in favor of the AI once that training is complete. I don’t think it’s going to be much longer before that predicament touches someone everyone knows.
Getting inside what makes the folks pushing AI’s thinking, Patel defines “Software Brain” as follows:
So what is software brain? The simplest definition I’ve come up with is that it’s when you see the whole world as a series of databases that can be controlled with the structured language of software code. Like I said, this is a powerful way of seeing things. So much of our lives run through databases, and a bunch of important companies have been built around maintaining those databases and providing access to them.
He later goes on:
Anyone who’s actually ever run a database knows this. At some point, the database stops matching reality. At that point, we usually end up tweaking the database, not the world. But the AI industry has fully lost sight of this, because AI thrives on data. It’s just software, after all. And so the ask is for more and more of us to conform our lives to the database, not the other way around.
You need to read or listen to the whole piece.
While I think “Software Brain” well defines the mindset of those celebrating and working towards an AI future. The crux of the matter for me, on perhaps a larger scale, is that for some reason, as ambiguous and arbitrary as we humans can be, we seem to shy away from our own ambiguity in favor of looking for a binary solution. On or off. Right or wrong. Correct or incorrect. We get angry with the shades and shadows of grey that muddy our yearning for black and white.
Perhaps a binary approach to everything seems like it would make life easier. It certainly helps avoid the danger zones of responsibility.
These are certainly early days of whatever Artificial Intelligence may or may not become. Even so, it appears to me it’s just going to be yet another way humans develop, market, and use to avoid facing the tough choices life tosses at us, or we toss at each other. I’m glad to see there is increasing skepticism.
I don’t build or code things with AI, so I can’t speak to that degree of what seems so exciting to so many. That said, the one thing I keep coming back to in my own, very rudimentary experiments with AI is this. At the moment it’s as error prone, and often as ambiguous and obsequious as any human in correcting itself. It seems to be a very human response etched into the code by its creators, knowing things don’t add up. Much like apparently, our DNA. The machines and the math behind them just don’t care.
I don’t think the humans running this race do either.
You can also find more of my writings on a variety of topics on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome. I can also be found on social media under my name as above. This site does not use affilate links.
#ArtificialIntelligence #Decoder #NIlayPatel #Tech -
Nilay Patel on Software Brain
Every now and then someone crystalizes a lot of the thoughts that spin around discussions, debates, and dialogues about a topic. When those topics are of great import, when the crystallization shows up, it is not only wise, but essential to pay attention. Call it a benchmark. Call it a new starting point for the conversation going forward. Nilay Patel has delivered just a benchmark to pay attention to with his monologue of sorts on his Decoder podcast. If you’re not up for a listen, you can give it a read on The Verge.
For the clear thinking presented there is a confusing array of headlines to choose from depending where you look, Including The People Do Not Yearn For Automation, and Why People Hate AI, but the one I think should stick shows up in my browser tab: Beware Software Brain.
Patel takes a well considered tour through the arguments and discussion that are scattered about and pulls them together nicely. If you ask for a core theme, I’d say that he argues that there are two schools of thought. One rushing to turn AI into what controls our lives. The other isn’t buying the sales pitch.
To me it’s always been a tough sell to foist this innovation on people if one of your selling points is that it will make their jobs unnecessary, let alone create environmentally hazardous data centers to run the machines that are going to eventually unemploy them. I know a few folks who, after training themselves up on AI to do what they do, only to be dismissed in favor of the AI once that training is complete. I don’t think it’s going to be much longer before that predicament touches someone everyone knows.
Getting inside what makes the folks pushing AI’s thinking, Patel defines “Software Brain” as follows:
So what is software brain? The simplest definition I’ve come up with is that it’s when you see the whole world as a series of databases that can be controlled with the structured language of software code. Like I said, this is a powerful way of seeing things. So much of our lives run through databases, and a bunch of important companies have been built around maintaining those databases and providing access to them.
He later goes on:
Anyone who’s actually ever run a database knows this. At some point, the database stops matching reality. At that point, we usually end up tweaking the database, not the world. But the AI industry has fully lost sight of this, because AI thrives on data. It’s just software, after all. And so the ask is for more and more of us to conform our lives to the database, not the other way around.
You need to read or listen to the whole piece.
While I think “Software Brain” well defines the mindset of those celebrating and working towards an AI future. The crux of the matter for me, on perhaps a larger scale, is that for some reason, as ambiguous and arbitrary as we humans can be, we seem to shy away from our own ambiguity in favor of looking for a binary solution. On or off. Right or wrong. Correct or incorrect. We get angry with the shades and shadows of grey that muddy our yearning for black and white.
Perhaps a binary approach to everything seems like it would make life easier. It certainly helps avoid the danger zones of responsibility.
These are certainly early days of whatever Artificial Intelligence may or may not become. Even so, it appears to me it’s just going to be yet another way humans develop, market, and use to avoid facing the tough choices life tosses at us, or we toss at each other. I’m glad to see there is increasing skepticism.
I don’t build or code things with AI, so I can’t speak to that degree of what seems so exciting to so many. That said, the one thing I keep coming back to in my own, very rudimentary experiments with AI is this. At the moment it’s as error prone, and often as ambiguous and obsequious as any human in correcting itself. It seems to be a very human response etched into the code by its creators, knowing things don’t add up. Much like apparently, our DNA. The machines and the math behind them just don’t care.
I don’t think the humans running this race do either.
You can also find more of my writings on a variety of topics on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome. I can also be found on social media under my name as above. This site does not use affilate links.
#ArtificialIntelligence #Decoder #NIlayPatel #Tech -
Nilay Patel on Software Brain
Every now and then someone crystalizes a lot of the thoughts that spin around discussions, debates, and dialogues about a topic. When those topics are of great import, when the crystallization shows up, it is not only wise, but essential to pay attention. Call it a benchmark. Call it a new starting point for the conversation going forward. Nilay Patel has delivered just a benchmark to pay attention to with his monologue of sorts on his Decoder podcast. If you’re not up for a listen, you can give it a read on The Verge.
For the clear thinking presented there is a confusing array of headlines to choose from depending where you look, Including The People Do Not Yearn For Automation, and Why People Hate AI, but the one I think should stick shows up in my browser tab: Beware Software Brain.
Patel takes a well considered tour through the arguments and discussion that are scattered about and pulls them together nicely. If you ask for a core theme, I’d say that he argues that there are two schools of thought. One rushing to turn AI into what controls our lives. The other isn’t buying the sales pitch.
To me it’s always been a tough sell to foist this innovation on people if one of your selling points is that it will make their jobs unnecessary, let alone create environmentally hazardous data centers to run the machines that are going to eventually unemploy them. I know a few folks who, after training themselves up on AI to do what they do, only to be dismissed in favor of the AI once that training is complete. I don’t think it’s going to be much longer before that predicament touches someone everyone knows.
Getting inside what makes the folks pushing AI’s thinking, Patel defines “Software Brain” as follows:
So what is software brain? The simplest definition I’ve come up with is that it’s when you see the whole world as a series of databases that can be controlled with the structured language of software code. Like I said, this is a powerful way of seeing things. So much of our lives run through databases, and a bunch of important companies have been built around maintaining those databases and providing access to them.
He later goes on:
Anyone who’s actually ever run a database knows this. At some point, the database stops matching reality. At that point, we usually end up tweaking the database, not the world. But the AI industry has fully lost sight of this, because AI thrives on data. It’s just software, after all. And so the ask is for more and more of us to conform our lives to the database, not the other way around.
You need to read or listen to the whole piece.
While I think “Software Brain” well defines the mindset of those celebrating and working towards an AI future. The crux of the matter for me, on perhaps a larger scale, is that for some reason, as ambiguous and arbitrary as we humans can be, we seem to shy away from our own ambiguity in favor of looking for a binary solution. On or off. Right or wrong. Correct or incorrect. We get angry with the shades and shadows of grey that muddy our yearning for black and white.
Perhaps a binary approach to everything seems like it would make life easier. It certainly helps avoid the danger zones of responsibility.
These are certainly early days of whatever Artificial Intelligence may or may not become. Even so, it appears to me it’s just going to be yet another way humans develop, market, and use to avoid facing the tough choices life tosses at us, or we toss at each other. I’m glad to see there is increasing skepticism.
I don’t build or code things with AI, so I can’t speak to that degree of what seems so exciting to so many. That said, the one thing I keep coming back to in my own, very rudimentary experiments with AI is this. At the moment it’s as error prone, and often as ambiguous and obsequious as any human in correcting itself. It seems to be a very human response etched into the code by its creators, knowing things don’t add up. Much like apparently, our DNA. The machines and the math behind them just don’t care.
I don’t think the humans running this race do either.
You can also find more of my writings on a variety of topics on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome. I can also be found on social media under my name as above. This site does not use affilate links.
#ArtificialIntelligence #Decoder #NIlayPatel #Tech -
Meta to Axe 8,000 Workers Amid AI Drive https://petapixel.com/2026/04/24/meta-to-axe-8000-workers-amid-ai-drive/ #ArtificialIntelligence #markzuckerberg #Technology #jobcuts #layoffs #News #meta
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Creators Build and Manage Viral AI-Generated Male Influencers on Social Media
📰 Original title: The Men Behind Your Favorite AI Gay Thirst Traps
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/creators-build-and-manage-viral-ai-generated-male-influencers-on-social-media/?redirpost=d3317903-3cfe-4d8d-aa98-33036d8b2b37
#artificialintelligence #aiinfluencers #socialmedia #virtualcreators
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Microsoft Elevate Malaysia Officially Launches #artificialintelligence #education #microsoftelevate
https://www.lowyat.net/2026/390811/microsoft-elevate-malaysia/
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Nothing Launches Essential Voice, A New Smart Speech-To-Text Feature #artificialintelligence #essentialvoice #mobile #nothing
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Nothing Launches Essential Voice, A New Smart Speech-To-Text Feature #artificialintelligence #essentialvoice #mobile #nothing
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Nothing Launches Essential Voice, A New Smart Speech-To-Text Feature #artificialintelligence #essentialvoice #mobile #nothing
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Nothing Launches Essential Voice, A New Smart Speech-To-Text Feature #artificialintelligence #essentialvoice #mobile #nothing
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Pentagon Rapidly Deploys 100,000 Custom AI Agents
The Pentagon has made a groundbreaking leap with its custom AI agents, deploying an astonishing 100,000+ agents in record time and racking up over 1.1 million user sessions. This explosive adoption has seen an average of 180,000 sessions per week, showcasing the military's eagerness to harness the power of AI.
#ArtificialIntelligence #CustomAiAgents #Genaimil #Pentagon #DefenseDepartment
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AMA Warns Congress of AI Chatbot Data Risks in Mental Health
The American Medical Association is urging Congress to set safeguards for AI chatbots offering mental health guidance, warning of potential risks if these tools aren't designed and deployed responsibly. Well-designed AI tools, however, can bring significant benefits to mental healthcare.
#ArtificialIntelligence #MentalHealth #Healthcare #EmergingThreats #AiChatbots
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AI Detection Tool Suggests Widespread Use of Generated Content Online, Including High-Profile Accounts
📰 Original title: The Pope’s Warnings About AI Were AI-Generated, a Detection Tool Claims
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/ai-detection-tool-suggests-widespread-use-of-generated-content-online-including-high-profile-accounts/?redirpost=e9801474-4ec6-45ff-8444-391a66197f89
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AI Detection Tool Suggests Widespread Use of Generated Content Online, Including High-Profile Accounts
📰 Original title: The Pope’s Warnings About AI Were AI-Generated, a Detection Tool Claims
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/ai-detection-tool-suggests-widespread-use-of-generated-content-online-including-high-profile-accounts/?redirpost=e9801474-4ec6-45ff-8444-391a66197f89
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AI Detection Tool Suggests Widespread Use of Generated Content Online, Including High-Profile Accounts
📰 Original title: The Pope’s Warnings About AI Were AI-Generated, a Detection Tool Claims
🤖 IA: It's clickbait ⚠️
👥 Usuarios: It's clickbait ⚠️View full AI summary: https://killbait.com/en/ai-detection-tool-suggests-widespread-use-of-generated-content-online-including-high-profile-accounts/?redirpost=e9801474-4ec6-45ff-8444-391a66197f89