The AI did better than professional mediators at getting people to reach agreement.
DeepMind's creative lead Lorrain enhances media with AI, working on projects with Marvel, Netflix, and teaching AI filmmaking at Columbia University.
AI agents must solve a host of tasks that require different speeds and levels of reasoning and planning capabilities. Ideally, an agent should know when to use its direct memory a
SynthID is a technology from Google DeepMind that watermarks and identifies AI-generated content by embedding digital watermarks directly into AI-generated images, audio, text, or video.
The company conducted a massive experiment on its watermarking tool SynthID’s usefulness by letting millions of Gemini users rank it.
Google DeepMind launches SynthID, a tool that embeds invisible watermarks in AI-generated text, enhancing transparency and combating misinformation.
As AI tech gets smarter it’s getting harder to spot the difference between content made by a human and what’s been dreamed up by an algorithm. Google, pushing the AI envelope itself, is aware of this and wants to help.
SynthID can watermark AI-generated content across different modalities such as text, images, audio, and videos.
It was April of 2018, and a day like any other until the first text arrived asking "Have you seen this yet?!" with a link to YouTube. Seconds later, former President Barack Obama was on screen delivering a speech in which he proclaimed President Donald Trump "is a total and complete [expletive].
I spent a couple of days last week at the University of Oxford in the UK where I spoke at and attended the Oxford Generative AI Summit. This multi-stakeholder event brought together elected and appointed officials from the UK and other countries along with academics and executives and scientists from tech and media companies.
It’s not your typical stop-motion film when characters name pets after Sylvia Plath and read The Diary of Anne Frank — or when the story’s inspired by a quote from existentialist thinker Soren Kierkegaard.