Month: July 2024

Tinder parent company cuts jobs as subscriber numbers slump

The number of people paying for the world’s most popular dating app has continued to slide.

The number of people paying for the world’s most popular dating app has continued to slide.

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The iPhone 16 Plus May Be Apple’s Last. Here’s Why

It might soon be time to say goodbye to Apple’s super-sized regular iPhone.

It might soon be time to say goodbye to Apple’s super-sized regular iPhone.

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Dating Apps Think AI Will Stop Swiping Burnout. It Might Make It Worse

Generative AI will be a chance for dating apps to show they’ve learned from past mistakes — if they take it.

Generative AI will be a chance for dating apps to show they’ve learned from past mistakes — if they take it.

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Silicon Valley Venture Capitalists Pledge to Support Kamala Harris

The group, including Democratic donors such as Reid Hoffman and Vinod Khosla, has been organized under an effort called VCsForKamala.

The group, including Democratic donors such as Reid Hoffman and Vinod Khosla, has been organized under an effort called VCsForKamala.

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Meta explains why its AI claimed Trump’s assassination attempt didn’t happen

Meta has explained why its AI chatbot didn’t want to respond to inquiries about the assassination attempt on Trump and then, in some cases, denied that the event took place. The company said it programmed Meta AI to not answer questions about an event right after it happens, because there’s typically “an enormous amount of confusion, conflicting information, or outright conspiracy theories in the public domain.” As for why Meta AI eventually started asserting that the attempt didn’t happen “in a small number of cases,” it was apparently due to hallucinations. 
An AI “hallucinates” when it generates false or misleading responses to questions that require factual replies due to various factors like inaccurate training data and AI models struggling to parse multiple sources of information. Meta says it has updated its AI’s responses and admits that it should have done so sooner. It’s still working to address its hallucination issue, though, so its chatbot could still be telling people that there was no attempt on the former president’s life. 
In addition, Meta has also explained why its social media platforms had been incorrectly applying the fact check label to the photo of Trump with his fist in the air taken right after the assassination attempt. A doctored version of that image made it look like his Secret Service agents were smiling, and the company applied a fact check label to it. Because the original and doctored photos were almost identical, Meta’s systems applied the label to the real image, as well. The company has since corrected the mistake. 
Trump’s supporters have been crying foul over Meta AI’s actions and have been accusing the company of suppressing the story. Google had to issue a response of its own after Elon Musk claimed that the company’s search engine imposed a “search ban” on the former president. Musk shared an image that showed Google’s autocomplete suggesting “president donald duck” when someone types in “president donald.” Google explained that it was due to a bug affecting its autocomplete feature and said that users can search for whatever they want anytime. This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/meta-explains-why-its-ai-claimed-trumps-assassination-attempt-didnt-happen-120002196.html?src=rss

Meta has explained why its AI chatbot didn’t want to respond to inquiries about the assassination attempt on Trump and then, in some cases, denied that the event took place. The company said it programmed Meta AI to not answer questions about an event right after it happens, because there’s typically “an enormous amount of confusion, conflicting information, or outright conspiracy theories in the public domain.” As for why Meta AI eventually started asserting that the attempt didn’t happen “in a small number of cases,” it was apparently due to hallucinations. 

An AI “hallucinates” when it generates false or misleading responses to questions that require factual replies due to various factors like inaccurate training data and AI models struggling to parse multiple sources of information. Meta says it has updated its AI’s responses and admits that it should have done so sooner. It’s still working to address its hallucination issue, though, so its chatbot could still be telling people that there was no attempt on the former president’s life. 

In addition, Meta has also explained why its social media platforms had been incorrectly applying the fact check label to the photo of Trump with his fist in the air taken right after the assassination attempt. A doctored version of that image made it look like his Secret Service agents were smiling, and the company applied a fact check label to it. Because the original and doctored photos were almost identical, Meta’s systems applied the label to the real image, as well. The company has since corrected the mistake. 

Trump’s supporters have been crying foul over Meta AI’s actions and have been accusing the company of suppressing the story. Google had to issue a response of its own after Elon Musk claimed that the company’s search engine imposed a “search ban” on the former president. Musk shared an image that showed Google’s autocomplete suggesting “president donald duck” when someone types in “president donald.” Google explained that it was due to a bug affecting its autocomplete feature and said that users can search for whatever they want anytime. 

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/meta-explains-why-its-ai-claimed-trumps-assassination-attempt-didnt-happen-120002196.html?src=rss

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Google Gemini Advanced Review: Don’t Cancel Your ChatGPT Plus Subscription

Google premium chatbot lags behind ChatGPT.

Google premium chatbot lags behind ChatGPT.

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Donald Trump raises $25M during Bitcoin 2024 conference

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump raised $25 million during the The Bitcoin 2024 conference. Fox Business reporter Eleanor Terrett announced that… Continue reading Donald Trump raises $25M during Bitcoin 2024 conference
The post Donald Trump raises $25M during Bitcoin 2024 conference appeared first on ReadWrite.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump raised $25 million during the The Bitcoin 2024 conference.

Fox Business reporter Eleanor Terrett announced that Trump raised an undisclosed amount of funds for his campaign during the Nashville conference. She wrote on July 27:

As the fundraiser for [Donald Trump] at the [The Bitcoin Conference] is set to start now, Tennessee’s [Senator Bill Hagerty], who is attending, says they are expecting the total amount raised to be an “eye-popping” number.

Then, on July 30, she disclosed the amount and shared that crypto exchange Gemini co-founders Tyler and Cameron Winklevoss, U.S. singer KidRock, YouTuber Jake Paul and Billy Ray Cyrus. She wrote:

So that eye-popping number turned out to be $25M. [Bitcoin Magazine] CEO [David Bailey] confirmed that [Donald Trump] raised $25M at [The Bitcoin Conference] fundraiser in Nashville.

Bailey himself also confirmed the report in a separate tweet sent on the same day, while also providing some more context. He wrote:

For those of you who didn’t hear it in Trump’s speech, [Donald Trump] raised $25m in Nashville. His second highest fundraiser ever across three different presidential campaigns. Came from a combo of industry and whales/OGs.

Warren and her goons talked Dems into committing mass seppuku.

Warren, crypto’s enemy number one?

Bailey was referring to Senator Elizabeth Warren, seen by many as one of the leaders of the Democratic tirade against cryptocurrencies. As ReadWrite reported at the end of May, she was among the signatories of a letter reading:

[We] seek an update on the Biden Administration’s actions to crack down on drug traffickers’ exploitation of crypto to grow their business and launder their ill-gotten gains

The letter in question was sent to the Office of National Drug Control Policy and the Drug Enforcement Administration. Similarly to Bailey, the Winklevoss twins also do not hide their dislike towards Warren.

As reported earlier this month, the Gemini crypto exchange founders donated $1M in Bitcoin to support John Deaton’s Senate bid against anti-crypto Senator Elizabeth Warren.

The post Donald Trump raises $25M during Bitcoin 2024 conference appeared first on ReadWrite.

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