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Oksana Zele

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Articles

  • Oct 9, 2024 | killthedj.com | Ana Balashova |Clara Alex |Oksana Zele

    In 2024, elections are set to take place in at least 64 countries, representing about 49% of the global population. That's a lot to fool. And this time, spreading like fire, AI technologies can potentially influence voters in ways we've never seen before. Remember that robocall of "Biden" telling New Hampshire Democrats to stay home on primary day? And then there's the Trump campaign's reposts of viral AI-generated images featuring Taylor Swift.

  • Sep 17, 2024 | killthedj.com | Clara Alex |Oksana Zele

    AI image generators have been facing increasing scrutiny lately for their inability to produce convincing representations of Vice President Kamala Harris, first reported by Wired.

  • Jul 24, 2024 | killthedj.com | Clara Alex |Oksana Zele

    What has been rumoured for years is now confirmed. Daniel Ek, CEO of Spotify, has officially announced that the music streaming platform will soon introduce a "deluxe version" featuring high-resolution audio. During Spotify's earnings call on July 23, Ek revealed that the enhanced version of the service is on the way, although he didn't specify an exact launch date. Bloomberg reports that Spotify aims to roll out the deluxe version by the end of this year.

  • Jul 23, 2024 | killthedj.com | Whiskey Riff |Oksana Zele |Clara Alex

    Imagine scrolling through a Spotify playlist and stumbling upon a catchy tune. You click on the artist's profile, eager to discover more about this new favorite, only to find... nothing. No social media, no concerts, no backstory. Just a generic profile picture and a handful of eerily similar tracks. Welcome to the world of fake AI artists on Spotify, a growing problem that threatens to undermine the very essence of artistic integrity.

  • Jul 17, 2024 | killthedj.com | Oksana Zele |Marques Brownlee |Clara Alex

    In a recent development that has sent ripples through the tech industry, several major companies, including Apple, NVIDIA, and Anthropic, have come under fire for their alleged use of YouTube video transcripts in training their artificial intelligence models. An investigation by Proof News uncovered that these Silicon Valley giants utilized subtitles from over 170,000 YouTube videos sourced from more than 48,000 channels.

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