
Andreas Olah
Articles
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Jan 8, 2024 |
aibusiness.com | Tom Taulli |Ben Wodecki |Andreas Olah |Deborah Yao
Before the official start of CES, the Consumer Technology Association, which runs CES, kicks off with an event called Unveiled, in which countless companies introduce their products to the media before any public unveiling at CES, which starts two days later. While the event is for only accredited journalists, there are thousands of those since they come from around the world.
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Jan 8, 2024 |
aibusiness.com | Tom Taulli |Ben Wodecki |Andreas Olah |Deborah Yao
About 130,000 people are gearing up for CES, or the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. The mega conference kicks off Jan. 9 and will take up more than 2.5 million square feet of space, spanning the Las Vegas Convention Center, the Venetian Expo Center, Aria, the Wynn and the Cosmopolitan hotels. With ChatGPT making AI a household moniker, it is no surprise that many of the more than 4,000 vendors are jumping on this proverbial bandwagon.
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Jan 8, 2024 |
aibusiness.com | Ben Wodecki |Andreas Olah |Deborah Yao
AI Business brings you the latest news and insights from across the AI world. To keep up to date with coverage of all things AI, subscribe to the AI Businessnewsletter to get content straight to your inbox and follow the AI Business Podcast on Apple and Spotify. Return of the KingElvis Presley is set to return to the stage thanks to AI. The King of Rock 'n' Roll will perform via hologram at a launch event in London this November. Other cities will follow.
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Jan 8, 2024 |
aibusiness.com | Ben Wodecki |Andreas Olah |Deborah Yao
Researchers from Google and MIT developed a new approach to training AI image models using only synthetic data to reduce laborious dataset gathering. SynCLR trains the AI model to recognize visuals using only synthetic images and captions, according to a paper published recently. The researchers used the seven billion parameter version of Meta’s Llama 2 to generate image captions.
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Jan 4, 2024 |
aibusiness.com | Ben Wodecki |Deborah Yao |Andreas Olah
The U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has published a report laying out in detail the types of cyberattacks that could be aimed at AI systems as well as possible defenses against them. The agency believes such a report is critical because current defenses against cyberattacks on AI systems are lackluster – at a time when AI is increasingly pervading all aspects of life and business.
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