[ad_1] Shares in Reddit have jumped more than 10% after the firm said it had struck a partnership deal with artificial intelligence (AI) start-up OpenAI.Under the agreement, the company behind the ChatGPT chatbot will get access to Reddit content, while it will also bring AI-powered features to the social media platform.The announcement highlights Reddit's efforts to broaden its income sources away from advertising.The deal also comes as a growing number
[ad_1] 16 May 2024Joe Fay,Technology ReporterJon Collins"Fear and greed" is driving investment in AI says Jon CollinsThere’s no doubt we’re in an AI arms race says Jon Collins.He’s worked in IT for 35 years in various roles, including as a software programmer, systems manager and chief technology officer.He’s now an industry analyst for research firm Gigaom.The current arms race was spurred by the launch of ChatGPT at the end of
[ad_1] Pornhub's parent company Aylo has announced it has backed new standards of good practice for pornography sites on combating child abuse, drawn up by UK charity the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF).The IWF is a key part of the UK's fight against online child sexual abuse material (CSAM), enabling people and organisations to report suspected online child abuse content.It hopes the announcement will lead other porn websites to support the
[ad_1] The largest music publisher in the world has sent letters to Google, Microsoft and OpenAI demanding to know if they have used its songs to develop artificial intelligence (AI) systems.Sony Music, which represents artists like Beyonce and Adele, is forbidding anyone from training, developing or making money from AI using its songs without permission.In the letter sent to more than 700 firms, Sony Music said it has "reason to
[ad_1] The European Union is investigating Facebook and Instagram over whether they are so addictive that they are having "negative effects" on the "physical and mental health" of children.It will also scrutinise if they have done enough to check whether users are old enough to use them, and how content is recommended to children.A number of big tech firms are now under investigation for potential breaches of the EU's tough
[ad_1] The machine that allows patients to take their own blood samples for analysis from home. [ad_2] Source link
[ad_1] 13 May 2024Priti Gupta,Technology Reporter, MumbaiRukmini KumbharRukmini Kumbhar collects cow dung and converts it to fuelEvery day, with bare hands, Rukmini Baburao Kumbhar, collects around 50kg (eight stone) of fresh cow dung.She is part of a spiritual group that runs a small ashram (a religious retreat) in a village in the north-western Indian state of Maharashtra.Collecting cow dung is not, primarily, an effort to keep the place tidy. Instead,
[ad_1] This week, the UK’s media regulator, Ofcom, set out new rules for social media companies - aimed at protecting children from harmful content online. More than 40 measures have been set out – including making firms change their algorithms and perform more rigorous age checks. Around the world, governments are considering – or have already passed – similar legislation. Analysis editor Ros Atkins looks at what other countries are
[ad_1] Many of us of a certain age will remember the Alan Partridge scene where he is pitching to a TV executive in a bid to get a new series commissioned.Getting ever more desperate, the fictional British TV presenter suggests shows such as Inner City Sumo, Youth Hostelling With Chris Eubanks, and finally, Monkey Tennis. All were perhaps unsurprisingly rejected. Maybe Partridge, played by comedian and actor Steve Coogan, would
[ad_1] Marianna Spring looks at how Ofcom wants to protect under-18 from harmful content on social media.The UK's media regulator has published draft codes of practice which require tech firms to have more robust age-checking measures, and to reformulate their algorithms to steer children away from what it called "toxic" material.In statements, Meta and Snapchat said they had extra protections for under-18s, and offered parental tools to control what children