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Google warns its staff about chatbots
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This is the Automated, your AI tour guide.
A warm welcome to the 203 folks who joined us yesterday.
Here’s what we got for you today:
🚨 Google Warns its Staff about Chatbots.
🤝 Meet I-JEPA: Meta’s self-supervised learning model.
🚨 Google Warns its Staff About Chatbots.
Google is cautioning employees about how they use chatbots (including its own, Bard).
Google doesn't want employees to input their confidential information into AI chatbots.
That makes sense, right? 😃
Considering AI can reproduce the data it absorbs during training, creating a potential leak risk.
That's not all.
Engineers are to avoid the direct use of computer code that chatbots can generate.
These cautions aren't just peculiar to Google, several businesses worldwide, including Samsung, Amazon, and Deutsche Bank have implemented similar safeguards.
In fact, some companies have developed software solutions to address these privacy concerns.
For instance, Cloudflare offers a capability for businesses to tag and restrict certain data from being shared externally. (It's quite good, you can check it out).
🤝 Meet I-JEPA: Meta’s Self-Supervised Learning Model.
They just released the first version of I-JEPA, a machine-learning model that can learn about the world without much human assistance.
I-JEPA uses self-supervised learning on images to develop abstract representations of the world.
In fact, the model is significantly more efficient compared to other state-of-the-art models, requiring only a tenth of the computing resources for training.
And the best part
Meta has made the training code and model open-source, allowing other researchers and developers to utilize and build upon their work.
Meta plans to present I-JEPA at the Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition (CVPR) next week.
That's all we've got for you today.
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