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Virtual Spokespeople Get Real

Ukraine’s New Foreign Ministry Spokeswoman is a ‘Digital Person’

While a number of news media outlets have been using digital news avatars for a number of years, Ukraine became the first country to designate a ‘digital personality’ as an official spokesperson.

Dubbed ‘Victoria,’ the cyber persona has been entrusted to make official government statements for Ukraine’s foreign ministry.

Interestingly, while AI is used to render and animate Victoria’s image, her statements will be written — and pre-verified — by humans employed by Ukraine’s foreign ministry press service.

Victoria’s credibility will also be enhanced by an anti-fraud QR code, which will lead to the text version of what Victoria is saying on the foreign ministry’s Web site.

Bottom line: This is a big deal, given that a major country
on the world’s political stage is entrusting a synthetic personality to often make life-and-death statements impacting humans.

In a phrase, world leaders, Ukrainian soldiers ducking mortar shells on the battlefield — and screaming school children huddling in subways as bombs drop from above — will need to trust their lives to what Victoria says.

*In-Depth Guide: Unleashing Your Inner Ventriloquist: Best AI Voice Tools Ranked: Writers looking to parlay their work into podcasts, videos, slideshow voice-overs and the like will want to check-out this guide to the best in text-to-voice tools.

The verdict from writer Alice Martin: The best AI voice generators use advanced AI that produce voices that sound incredibly human.

They can also use “a variety of presets — or even clone your own voice — making AI voices popular for projects such as virtual assistants, video games, professional voice-overs and social media content,” Martin adds.

*AI Now Crafts Fictional Characters While You Nap: AI pioneer Sudowrite is promising a new module writers can use to auto-build personality traits, background, physical appearances and mannerisms for fictional characters.

Also promised is a new world-building tool that will enable writers to auto-design fictional worlds ranging from dystopian cities to magical realms.

The AI tool — which uses AI engines like GPT-4 and Claude 3 to work its magic — will also be enhanced system-wide to enable writers to auto-generate fiction more efficiently.

*Elon Musk Serves-Up AI Cliff Notes for X Users: Social network X — formerly Twitter — now features news summaries generated by AI, dubbed ‘Stories on X.’

Observes writer Karissa Bell: “X is using Grok (a ChatGPT competitor) to publish AI-generated summaries of news and other topics that trend on the platform.

“According to X, Grok relies on users’ posts to generate the text snippets.

“Some seem to be more news-focused — while others are summaries of conversations happening on the platform itself.”

Both X and Grok are owned by Elon Musk.

*University of Texas to Grammarly: Be Our Guest: Add UT to the list of universities that have decided to give AI a full bear hug.

Specifically, the institution is now working with AI writing assistant Grammarly to find ways to integrate AI into higher education.

Observes Art Markman, vice provost, academic affairs: “We are in an era with a lot of uncertainty surrounding AI and education.

“This is a chance to demonstrate how to use generative AI as a positive source for education, teach responsibility to our students and engage an industry leader to improve our understanding of classroom AI.”

*Say Goodbye to Snoozeworthy: Facebook Parent Promises New AI Ad Tool: Meta is promising a new AI tool that will enable advertisers to auto-generate images and copy for their products and services.

Observes writer Kimberley Kao: “The new features will eventually allow its (Meta’s) 10 million advertisers to upload images of their products to generate new versions of the images and accompanying text for marketing purposes.”

Digital properties owned by Meta featuring advertising include Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Reels and Threads.

*A Look Into the Belly of the Beast: AI and the Smearing of Sports Illustrated: Futurism takes a long, hard look at Advon in this piece — the AI content writing firm that tried to pass-off fake descriptions of journalists as human writers for Sports Illustrated.

Observes writer Maggie Harrison Dupre: “The response was explosive: The magazine’s union wrote that it was ‘horrified,’ while its publisher cut ties with AdVon and subsequently fired its CEO before losing the rights to Sports Illustrated entirely.”

Turns-out that even after the Sports Illustrated debacle, Advon is still at it, striking “deals with publishers in which it provides huge numbers of low-quality product reviews — often for surprisingly prominent publications,” Dupre adds.

*Second Fiddle: Microsoft Building AI Engine ‘Nearly as Good’ as ChatGPT: Tech titan Microsoft is promising to roll-out an AI engine soon that will be nearly as good as ChatGPT, Google Gemini and similar competitors.

Observes Reuters: “The exact purpose of the model has not been determined yet and will depend on how well it performs.

“Microsoft could preview the new model as soon as its Build developer conference later this month.”

*New Study: The Promise and Perils of AI and Journalism: A new report from Northwestern University finds that AI-generated content could spell the end of many writing jobs.

Observes writer Mark Caro: “Many people who practice or care about journalism fear that generative AI — with its ability to create content with little human involvement — could be the final nail in the local news coffin.

“Given how some chain owners have prioritized cost-cutting and profit-making over sustained journalistic quality, what is to stop them from replacing more reporters and editors with robots?

“Can news consumers be relied upon to discern between human-reported journalism and machine-generated content—and does it matter?”

Unfortunately, for many writers and journalists, that question has already been answered.

*AI Big Picture: Randy Travis Gets His Voice Back — With a Little Help from AI: World-famous country singer Randy Travis — who lost his voice to a stroke in 2013 — has a new single out.

Entitled, “Where That Came From,” the new song was put together by AI, which sampled recordings of Travis’ songs to create the all-AI production.

Observes writer Wes Davis: “Travis’ song is a good, edge-case example of AI being used to make music that actually feels legitimate.

“But on the other hand, it also may open a new path for Warner, which owns the rights to vast catalogs of music from famous, dead artists that are ripe for digital resurrection and — if they want to go there — potential profit.

“As heartwarming as this story is, it makes me wonder what lessons Warner Music Nashville — and the record industry as a whole — will take away from this song.”

Share a Link:  Please consider sharing a link to https://RobotWritersAI.com from your blog, social media post, publication or emails. More links leading to RobotWritersAI.com helps everyone interested in AI-generated writing.

Joe Dysart is editor of RobotWritersAI.com and a tech journalist with 20+ years experience. His work has appeared in 150+ publications, including The New York Times and the Financial Times of London.

The post Virtual Spokespeople Get Real appeared first on Robot Writers AI.

What’s coming up at #ICRA2024?

The 2024 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation (ICRA) will take place from 13-17 May, in Yokohama, Japan. The event will feature plenary and keynote talks, technical sessions, posters, workshops and tutorials.

Plenary speakers

There are three plenary talks at the conference this year:

  • Yoky Matsuoka – How to Turn a Roboticist into a Corporate Explorer
  • Sami Haddadin – The Great Robot Accelerator: Collective Learning of Optimal Embodied AI
  • Sunil K Agrawal – Rehabilitation Robotics: How to Improve Daily Functions in People with Impairments?

Keynote talks

There will be 15 keynote talks, given by:

  • Lianqing Liu – Biosyncretic sensing, actuation and intelligence for robotics
  • Dawn M. Tilbury – Digital Twins for Manufacturing Automation
  • Claudio Pacchierotti – Beyond Force Feedback: Cutaneous Haptics in Human-centered Robotics
  • Yu Sun – Medical Robotics for Cell Surgery – Science and Applications
  • Yasuhisa Hirata – Adaptable AI-enabled Robots to Create a Vibrant Society – Moonshot R&D Projects in Japan
  • Calin Belta – Formal Methods for Safety-Critical Control
  • Manuel Catalano – Robots in the Wild: From Research Labs to the Real World
  • Harold Soh – Building Guidance Bridges with Generative Models for Robot Learning and Control
  • Lorenzo Sabattini – Unleashing the power of many: decentralized control of multi-robot systems
  • Myunghee Kim – Human-wearable robot co-adaptation
  • Yoko Yamanishi – Emergent Functions of Electrically-induced Bubbles and Intra-cellular-Cybernetic Avatar
  • Kensuke Harada – Robotic manipulation aiming for industrial applications
  • Iolanda Leite – The Quest for Social Robot Autonomy
  • Rong Xiong – Integration of Robotics and AI: Changes and Challenges
  • Mariana Medina-Sánchez – Tiny Robots, Big Impact: Transforming Gynecological Care

Tutorials

The tutorials will be held on Monday 13 May and Friday 17 May.

Workshops

The workshops will also be held on Monday 13 May and Friday 17 May. There are 73 to choose from this year.

You can see the programme overview here, with a detailed programme available here.

DataRobot Recognized by Customers with TrustRadius Top Rated Award for Third Consecutive Year 

Our mission at DataRobot has been to help customers use AI to drive business value. 

Business value is built into our DNA, and nothing is better than hearing the success stories directly from our customers.

We’re thrilled to share that our customers have recognized DataRobot in the TrustRadius Top Rated Award for the third consecutive year in the following categories:

  • Data science
  • Machine learning
  • Predictive analytics

We are incredibly proud of this award — based solely on customer reviews.

About TrustRadius

TrustRadius is a buyer intelligence platform for business technology and its annual Top Rated Awards are based entirely on customer feedback – they aren’t influenced by outside opinion. TrustRadius looks at the recency of reviews, relevancy of products compared to others in the same category, and overall ratings. 

With a trScore of 8.8 out of 10 and nearly 60 verified reviews from our customers, we’re proven as one of the most valuable platforms in our industry, with demonstrated impact and results.

Why our customers trust DataRobot

In their own words, our customers share the wins they’ve experienced by using the DataRobot AI Platform:

When I spoke with our Chief Customer Officer, Jay Schuren, he shared his sincere appreciation for our brilliant customers and thanked them for this recognition. He said:

We continually strive to wow our customers. The Top Rated Award is only made possible by our customers’ success. When our customers win, we join them in celebrating the business transformations made possible with AI.
jay
Jay Schuren

Chief Customer Officer

Learn more

Hear how customers deliver AI value at FordDirect, Freddie Mac, 84.51°, and many more.  

Demo
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The post DataRobot Recognized by Customers with TrustRadius Top Rated Award for Third Consecutive Year  appeared first on DataRobot AI Platform.

Generative AI that imitates human motion

Walking and running is notoriously difficult to recreate in robots. Now, a group of researchers has overcome some of these challenges by creating an innovative method that employs central pattern generators -- neural circuits located in the spinal cord that generate rhythmic patterns of muscle activity -- with deep reinforcement learning. The method not only imitates walking and running motions but also generates movements for frequencies where motion data is absent, enables smooth transition movements from walking to running, and allows for adapting to environments with unstable surfaces.

Robotic system feeds people with severe mobility limitations

Cornell researchers have developed a robotic feeding system that uses computer vision, machine learning and multimodal sensing to safely feed people with severe mobility limitations, including those with spinal cord injuries, cerebral palsy and multiple sclerosis.

New approach uses generative AI to imitate human motion

An international group of researchers has created a new approach to imitating human motion by combining central pattern generators (CPGs) and deep reinforcement learning (DRL). The method not only imitates walking and running motions but also generates movements for frequencies where motion data is absent, enables smooth transition movements from walking to running, and allows for adaptation to environments with unstable surfaces.

Cloud Security is Broken: SentinelOne Aims to Fix It

Cloud security traditionally revolves around detection rather than protection. SentinelOne intends to change that by introducing a potentially game-changing solution—Singularity Cloud Native Security. This new offering moves the needle towards proactive, offensive measures that aim to protect as much as […]

The post Cloud Security is Broken: SentinelOne Aims to Fix It appeared first on TechSpective.

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