The powers of generative AI are now accessible to everybody with a computer or phone and a reliable internet connection thanks to its quick adoption. Although this sounds great in theory and may result in revolutionary discoveries, there is a drawback.
There are a startling amount of deepfakes on the internet. Knowing what is genuine from AI-generated fakes is becoming more difficult. Jack Patrick Dorsey, a co-founder and former CEO of X (Twitter), recently expressed similar feelings:
“Verify rather than rely. You need to go through it for yourself. You also need to educate yourself. Because of how photos, deep fakes, and videos are produced, this will become important as we approach the next five or ten years. You won’t be able to tell what is real and what is fake.”
Artificial intelligence (AI)-driven tools, such as Microsoft’s Image Creator from Designer or OpenAI’s ChatGPT, are so proficient at producing structural designs that they are making professionals in the built environment unemployed. This isn’t only for photos either; advanced technologies such as Sora can produce videos up to one minute in length, which shortly might rival Hollywood’s output.
Not much has been done to stop the widespread use of deepfakes that are misrepresented as authentic on the internet. Several solutions have been proposed by OpenAI to address these problems, such as watermarking photos produced with ChatGPT and DALL-E 3 technology. OpenAI acknowledges that its technology isn’t “a silver bullet to address issues of provenance.”
CEO of Square and a billionaire, Jack Dorsey added:
It will be nearly hard to determine. You’ll experience a sense of being in a simulation. Everything will appear made because it will all appear manufactured. It’s critical that you change your perspective, or make an effort to change your perspective, to confirm the needs you feel you have based on your intuition and experience.”
In reaction to Dorsey’s video that was posted on X (formerly Twitter), Elon Musk, the billionaire and owner of X, seems to feel the same way. Musk went on, “How do we know we aren’t there already?”
According to Jack Dorsey, the spread of bogus content over the next five to ten years will make it feel like we’re living in a simulation picture and we won’t be able to tell what is real anymore.l1cStyFJmm on TwitterJune 23, 2024
Dorsey also discussed the use of AI to automate tasks that the human brain has historically performed. The majority of the features, he continued, are accessible on all of your devices, keeping users from “building those connections in your brain anymore.”
According to a recent study, AI is replacing humans in the workforce. Because of the AI wave and the rise of sophisticated chatbots like Copilot AI and ChatGPT, which can produce vast amounts of text in a matter of seconds, writers and editors have suffered.
To save money that would have gone towards paying authors’ salaries, several publications have chosen to automate some of the writers’ work. This hasn’t, however, worked as planned because it has negatively impacted their Wikipedia scores and ranks. According to the survey, a new trend is starting. For less money, publications employ writers to sift through vast amounts of content, fix grammatical mistakes, and make the writing seem less robotic.
The new flagship GPT-4o model from OpenAI, which can reason over text, graphics, and more, was just released. It will be fascinating to observe how it does in comparison to its predecessors at such jobs. It can already carry on discussions akin to those of a person; this may also hold when producing writing.