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Tag: Technology

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Business

Amazon Stock Falls on Mixed Earnings Report and Weak Forecast. AWS Missed Too.

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date February 2, 2023
  • No Comments on Amazon Stock Falls on Mixed Earnings Report and Weak Forecast. AWS Missed Too.
Amazon Stock Falls on Mixed Earnings Report and Weak Forecast.  AWS Missed Too.

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  • Tags Amazon.com, AMZN, Business, Business/Consumer Services, C&E Exclusion Filter, C&E Industry News Filter, cloud computing, Computer Services, computers, Computers/Consumer Electronics, consumer electronics, consumer services, Content Types, corporate, Corporate/Industrial News, Data Services, detailing, disruption, Earnings, Earnings Projections, Earnings Report, Ecommerce, Factiva Filters, Financial Performance, happy types, industrial news, Markets, Microsoft, MSFT, north america, Online Service Providers, Retail, Retail/Wholesale, Rivian Automotive, RIVN, share price movement, Share Price Movement/Disruptions, SYND, Tailing, Technology, wholesale

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Business

Alphabet (GOOGL) earnings Q4 2022

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date February 2, 2023
  • No Comments on Alphabet (GOOGL) earnings Q4 2022
Alphabet (GOOGL) earnings Q4 2022

Sundar Pichai, chief executive officer of Alphabet Inc., speaks during the CEO Summit of the Americas hosted by the US Chamber of Commerce in Los Angeles, California, US, on Thursday, June 9, 2022.

Kyle Grillot | Bloomberg | Getty Images

parent google Alphabet will report fourth-quarter earnings Thursday after the close of regular trading. Here’s what analysts are expecting:

  • Earnings: $1.18 per share, according to Refinitiv estimates.
  • Income: $76.53 billion, according to Refinitiv estimates.
  • YouTube advertising revenue: $8.25 billion, according to StreetAccount estimates.
  • Google Cloud income: $7.43 billion, according to StreetAccount estimates.
  • Traffic acquisition costs (TAC): $13.32 billion, according to StreetAccount estimates.

Google’s core ad business is expected to report minimal expansion from a year earlier, and growth is likely to remain in the single digits until late 2023, based on analyst estimates.

A slowing economy and competition from TikTok have hurt Google as well as digital ad rivals Snap and Facebook. Earlier this week, Snap reported weaker-than-expected revenue, while Facebook parent Meta topped estimates but still recorded a 4% decline in sales.

In January, Alphabet announced it was laying off 12,000 employees, or 6% of its workforce. The company told employees recently that more of them will be at risk for low performance ratings than in prior years.

Alphabet also cut staff in its health sciences unit Verily by 15%, citing a restructuring that will supposedly better position the business to seek financial independence.

Pressure is mounting for Google in other ways.

Artificial intelligence-based chatbot ChatGPT, launched late last year by Microsoft-backed OpenAI, is viewed as posing a risk to Google’s search engine. Executives teased that the company may introduce a similar product to the public at some point this year. CNBC reported this week that Google is internally experimenting with several potential products that could influence its search business.

In January, the US Justice Department filed its second antitrust lawsuit against Google in just over two years, this one targeting its advertising business. It marked the first federal lawsuit against Google filed during the Biden administration.

Google is now showing its willingness to invest heavily in live sports. During the fourth quarter, the company agreed to pay $2 billion per year for the next seven years for YouTube to own the exclusive rights for “NFL Sunday Ticket.”

WATCH: US Justice Department addresses antitrust litigation against Google

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  • Tags Alphabet Class A, Alphabet Class C, Breaking News: Earnings, Breaking News: Technology, business news, Google, Internet, Meta Platforms Inc., Microsoft Corp., Snap Inc., Technology

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Entertainment

AI Art Generators Can Simply Copy Existing Images

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date February 1, 2023
  • No Comments on AI Art Generators Can Simply Copy Existing Images
AI Art Generators Can Simply Copy Existing Images

The image on the right was generated by taking the training data caption for the left image “Living in the light with Ann Graham Lotz” and then feeding it into the Stable Diffusion prompt.
Picture: Cornell University/Extracting Training Data from Diffusion Models

One of the main defenses used by those who are bullish on AI art generators is that although the models are trained on existing images, everything they create is new. AI evangelists often compare these systems to real life artists. Creative people are inspired by all those who came before them, so why can’t AI be similarly evocative of previous work?

New research may put a damper on that argument, and could even become a major sticking point for multiple ongoing lawsuits regarding AI-generated content and copyright. Researchers in both industry and academia found that the most popular and upcoming AI image generators can “memorize” images from the data they’re trained on. Instead of creating something completely new, certain prompts will get the AI ​​to simply reproduce an image. Some of these recreated images could be copyrighted. But even worse, modern AI generative models have the capability to memorize and reproduce sensitive information scraped up for use in an AI training set.

The study was conducted by researchers both in the tech industry—specifically Google and DeepMind—and at universities like Berkeley and Princeton. The same crew worked on an earlier study that identified a similar problem with AI language models, specifically GPT2, the precursor to OpenAI’s extraordinarily popular ChatGPT. Getting the band back together, the researchers led by Google Brain researcher Nicholas Carlini found that both Google’s Imagen and the popular open source Stable Diffusion were capable of reproducing images, some of which had obvious implications against image copyright or licenses.

The first image in that tweet was generated using the caption listed on Stable Diffusion’s dataset, the multi-terabyte scraped image database known as LAION. The team fed the caption into the Stable Diffusion prompt, and out came the same exact image, though slightly distorted with digital noise. The process for finding these duplicate images was relatively simple. The team ran the same prompt multiple times, and after getting that same resulting image, the researchers manually checked if the image was in the training set.

G/O Media may get a commission

A series of images on the top and bottom revealing images taken from an AI training set and the AI ​​itself.

The bottom images were traced to the top images that were taken directly from AI’s training data. All these images could have license or copyright tied to them.
Picture: Cornell University/Extracting Training Data from Diffusion Models

Two of the paper’s researchers Eric Wallace, a PHD student at UC Berkeley, and Vikash Sehwag, a PHD candidate at Princeton University, told Gizmodo in a Zoom interview that image duplication was rare. Their team tried out about 300,000 different captions, and only found a .03% memorization rate. Copied images were even rarer for models like Stable Diffusion that have worked to de-duplicate images in its training set, though in the end, all diffusion models will have the same issue, to a greater or lesser degree. The researchers found that Imagen was fully capable of memorizing images that only existed once in the data set.

“The caveat here is that the model is supposed to generalize, it’s supposed to generate novel images rather than spitting out a memorized version,” Sehwag said.

Their research showed that as the AI ​​systems themselves get bigger and more sophisticated, there’s more likelihood AI will generate copied material. A smaller model like Stable Diffusion simply does not have the same amount of storage space to store most of that training data. That could very much change in the next few years.

“Maybe in next year, whatever new model comes out that’s a lot bigger and a lot more powerful, then potentially these kinds of memorization risks would be a lot higher than they are now,” Wallace said.

Through a complicated process that involves destroying the training data with noise before removing that same distortion, Diffusion-based machine learning models create data—in this case, images—similar to what it was trained on. Diffusion models were an evolution from the generative adversarial networks, or GAN-based machine learning.

The researchers found that GAN-based models do not have the same problem with image memorization, but it’s unlikely that major companies will move on beyond Diffusion unless an even more sophisticated machine learning model comes around that produces even more realistic, high quality images.

Florian Tramèr, a computer science professor at ETH Zurich who participated in the research, noted how many AI companies advise that users, both those in free and paid versions, are granted license to share or even monetize the AI-generated content. The AI ​​companies themselves also reserve some of the rights to these images. This could prove a problem if the AI ​​generates an image that is exactly the same as an existing copyright.

With only a .03% rate of memorization, AI developers could look at this study and determine there’s not much of a risk. Companies could work to de-duplicate images in the training data, which would make it less likely to memorize. Hell, they could even develop AI systems that would detect if an image is a direct replication of an image in training data and flag it for deletion. However, it masks the full risk to privacy posed by generative AI. Carlini and Tramèr also assisted on another recent paper that argued that even attempts to filter data still does not prevent training data from leaking out through the model.

And of course, there’s a high risk that images nobody would want recopied end up showing up on users’ screens. Wallace asked if a researcher wanted to generate a whole host of synthetic medical data of people’s X-Rays, for example. What should happen if a diffusion-based AI memorizes and duplicates a person’s actual medical records?

“It is pretty rare, so you might not notice it’s happening at first, and then you might actually deploy this dataset on the web,” the UC Berkeley student said. “The goal of this work is to kind of preempt those possible sorts of mistakes that people might make.”

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  • Tags Academic disciplines, artificial intelligence, Artificial neural networks, Computational neuroscience, Cybernetics, DeepMind, Emerging technologies, Eric Wallace, Florian Tramer, Generative adversarial network, Gizmodo, Google, Internet, items, machine learning, Nicholas Carlini, Open AI, Technology, Vikash Sehwag

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Business

Peloton CEO Barry McCarthy doesn’t care Bikes, Treads lose money

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date February 1, 2023
  • No Comments on Peloton CEO Barry McCarthy doesn’t care Bikes, Treads lose money
Peloton CEO Barry McCarthy doesn't care Bikes, Treads lose money

Barry McCarthy speaks during an interview with CNBC on floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), October 28, 2019.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Platoon CEO Barry McCarthy told investors Wednesday he doesn’t care that the company is losing money on its Bike, Tread and Row equipment. The business’s “path to the promised land,” he said, is its mobile app.

Peloton posted negative margins during the holiday quarter for its pricey connected fitness products, but McCarthy said he’s more concerned with aggregate margins, which were in the positive thanks to the company’s subscription revenue.

“We take a holistic view of the revenue stream and the expenses associated with both the hardware and the subscription associated with it. So from my part, I don’t particularly care about the hardware margin,” McCarthy said during the company’s earnings call.

“I care about it on an aggregate basis, and I care about the relationship between the lifetime value of the customer relative to the cost of acquisition,” he said.

In Peloton’s fiscal second quarter of 2023, ended Dec. 31, the exercise equipment company lost $42.8 million on its connected fitness products, bringing the division’s gross margin to negative 11.2%.

The company’s overall gross margin of 29.7% was kept afloat by the $277.9 million Peloton made from its subscription business, at a margin of 67.6%.

While subscription revenue was effectively flat quarter over quarter, it exceeded sales from Peloton’s connected fitness products for the third quarter in a row. McCarthy told CNBC it signals a possible “turning point” for the company.

When asked about how the app, which features on-demand workout classes from the company’s pseudo-celebrity instructors, fits into the exercise equipment company’s overall strategy, McCarthy said his primary goal is to expand Peloton’s total market share by reaching a user base that it hasn’t been able to access before.

The cost of the app, which doesn’t require any Peloton equipment, is $12.99 per month compared with the $44 monthly cost for the company’s all-access membership that can be used on its connected fitness equipment.

“I think of it as its own endgame,” McCarthy said.

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  • Tags Barry McCarthy, Breaking News: Business, Business, business news, Earnings, Peloton Interactive Inc, retail industry, Technology

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Business

Bitcoin Pauses as Crypto Traders Await the Fed Decision. Brace for Volatility.

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date February 1, 2023
  • No Comments on Bitcoin Pauses as Crypto Traders Await the Fed Decision. Brace for Volatility.
Bitcoin Pauses as Crypto Traders Await the Fed Decision.  Brace for Volatility.

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  • Tags AAPL, advertising, Advertising/Marketing/Public Relations, Alphabet Cl A, Amazon.com, AMZN, Apple, banking, Banking/Credit, BitcoinUSD, blockchain, BTCUSD, Business, business news, Business/Consumer Services, C&E Exclusion Filter, commodities, Commodity/Financial Market News, consumer services, Content Types, credit, cryptocurrencies, Cryptocurrency Markets, currency markets, DogecoinUSD, DOGEUSD, economic news, Economy & Policy, economy & politics, EthereumUSD, ETHUSD, Factiva Filters, federal reserve, financial market news, Financial Services, financial technology, Foreign Exchange Markets, GOOGL, happy types, market research, Market Research/Public Relations, Marketing, Markets, MATICUSD, money, Money/Currency Markets, Polygon USD, public relations, SYND, Technology, Virtual Currencies, Virtual Currencies/Cryptocurrencies

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Business

Britain sets out plans to regulate crypto industry in wake of FTX collapse

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date February 1, 2023
  • No Comments on Britain sets out plans to regulate crypto industry in wake of FTX collapse
Britain sets out plans to regulate crypto industry in wake of FTX collapse

British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak speaks during a Q&A at Teesside University, on Jan. 30, 2023.

Oli Scarff | Wpa Pool | Getty Images NewS

The UK formally laid out plans to regulate the cryptocurrency industry, with the government looking to rein in some of the reckless business practices that emerged over the past year and contributed to the demise of FTX.

In a widely-anticipated industry consultation launched Tuesday, the government proposed a number of measures aimed at bringing regulation of crypto asset businesses in line with that of traditional financial firms.

Among the proposals unveiled Tuesday was a move that would strengthen rules targeting financial intermediaries and custodians that store crypto on behalf of clients.

A big theme that emerged in 2022 was the rise of risky loans made between multiple crypto firms and a lack of due diligence done on the counterparties involved in those transactions.

The UK proposals would crack down on such activities, seeking to establish a “robust world-first regime strengthening rules around the lending of cryptoassets, whilst enhancing consumer protection and the operational resilience of firms,” ​​according to a statement out late Tuesday.

“We remain steadfast in our commitment to grow the economy and enable technological change and innovation — and this includes cryptoasset technology,” Andrew Griffith, economic secretary to the Treasury, said in a statement.

“But we must also protect consumers who are embracing this new technology — ensuring robust, transparent, and fair standards.”

The collapse of FTX has added urgency to global regulators’ attempts to govern the regulation-averse crypto space. The European Union and the US have already made proposals of their own to improve consumer protections in crypto.

In a Dec. 2 speech, Griffith said that “recent events in the crypto market reinforce the case for timely, clear and effective regulation.”

The implosion of FTX, which allegedly used customer money to make risky loans and trades, set off a chain reaction of bankruptcies for digital asset lending firms with exposure to the crypto giant, including BlockFi and Digital Currency Group’s Genesis Trading.

The proposals unveiled Tuesday would also enforce tougher transparency requirements on crypto exchanges to ensure they publish relevant disclosure documents and set out clear admission requirements for trading digital tokens.

Read more about tech and crypto from CNBC Pro

Another measure would relax strict rules on crypto advertisements, allowing firms with Financial Conduct Authority registration to issue their own promotions while the broader crypto regime is being introduced.

The regulatory move comes as crypto firms in both the UK and beyond are feeling the chill of a deep downturn known as “crypto winter.”

Companies are seeing their valuations slashed by investors after the blowup of FTX and a slump in crypto prices, while the industry has also been plagued by numerous rounds of layoffs. Last week, London-based crypto exchange Luno cut 35% of its workforce in a move impacting over 330 roles.

Regulation takes time. It will likely take years before the measures are approved by Parliament. The Financial Services and Markets Bill, which would recognize crypto assets as regulated products, is still making its way through Parliament. The law aims to make the country’s financial sector more competitive post-Brexit.

Nevertheless, even the simple display of being seen as taking action is important, according to some industry executives.

“Having a regulatory roadmap or regulatory direction of travel is going to be super useful for the UK in terms of being a crypto hub,” Julian Sawyer, CEO of Standard Chartered-backed crypto custody services firm Zodia Custody, told CNBC Tuesday in an interview .

Sawyer, who formerly co-founded British fintech firm Starling and led international expansion for crypto exchange Gemini, said it was also important to ensure “general alignment between global markets in terms of the approach to digital assets.”

He noted the European Union has gotten ahead of the game with its Markets in Crypto-Assets law, which is expected to come into force in 2024.

Bitcoin, which has stealthily climbed about 40% since the start of 2023, was trading flat Wednesday at a price of $23,103.

Global crypto hub ambitions

Bitcoin at $10,000 — or $250,000?  Investors are sharply divided on 2023

Rishi Sunak, who took the reins as UK leader in October 2022, is seen by market players as a crypto-friendly prime minister, having previously said he’s “determined” to make the UK “the jurisdiction of choice for crypto and blockchain technology.”

As London looks to compete with EU financial hubs after Brexit, crypto could be a way for it to improve its chances, industry insiders said previously.

“There is an opportunity to provide clarity to the industry and allow it to play its role in achieving their mandate to encourage businesses to invest, to innovate, and to create jobs in the UK,” Jordan Wain, UK public policy lead at Chainalysis, told CNBC in November.

Sunak’s administration will consult on plans to introduce a new set of rules tailored to crypto companies, with a view to closing the consultation by Apr. 30, after which it will formulate more detailed rules.

WATCH: Has crypto winter thawed out?

Has crypto winter thawed out?

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  • Tags Bitcoin, business news, Cryptocurrency, Economy, Internet, Investment strategy, Markets, Technology

Categories
Business

Google testing ChatGPT-like chatbot ‘Apprentice Bard’ with employees

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date February 1, 2023
  • No Comments on Google testing ChatGPT-like chatbot ‘Apprentice Bard’ with employees
Google testing ChatGPT-like chatbot 'Apprentice Bard' with employees

A man walks through Google offices on January 25, 2023 in New York City.

Leonardo Munoz | Corbis News | Getty Images

Google is testing new artificial intelligence-powered chat products that are likely to influence a future public product launch. They include a new chatbot and a potential way to integrate it into a search engine.

Tea Alphabet company is working on a project under its cloud unit called “Atlas,” which is a “code red” effort to respond to ChatGPT, the large-language chatbot that took the public by storm when it went public late last year.

Google is also testing a chatbot called “Apprentice Bard,” where employees can ask questions and receive detailed answers similar to ChatGPT. Another product unit has been testing a new search desktop design that could be used in a question-and-answer form.

Leaders have been asking more employees for feedback on the efforts in recent weeks. CNBC viewed internal documents and spoke with sources about the efforts currently underway.

The product tests come after a recent all-hands meeting where employees raised concerns about the company’s competitive edge in AI, given the sudden popularity of ChatGPT, which was launched by OpenAI, a San Francisco-based startup that’s backed by Microsoft.

Google’s AI chief Jeff Dean told employees at the time that the company has much more “reputational risk” in providing wrong information and thus is moving “more conservatively than a small startup.” However, he and CEO Sundar Pichai teased at the time that Google may launch similar products to the public some time this year. Google’s prime business is web search, and the company has long touted itself as a pioneer in AI.

Apprentice Bard

One of the test products is a chatbot called Apprentice Bard, which uses Google’s conversation technology LaMDA, or Language Model for Dialogue Applications.

“As a result of ChatGPT, the LaMDA team has been asked to prioritize working on a response to ChatGPT,” read one internal memo viewed by CNBC. “In the short term, it takes precedence over other projects,” the email continued, warning that some employees stop attending certain unrelated meetings.

Apprentice Bard looks similar to ChatGPT: Employees can enter a question in a dialog box and get a text answer, then give feedback on the response. Based on several responses viewed by CNBC, Apprentice Bard’s answers can include recent events, a feature ChatGPT doesn’t have yet.

Apprentice Bard replaced Meena, a previous version of a smart chat bot that had launched internally but was later discontinued. Employees have noticed Apprentice Bard’s responses becoming more advanced in recent weeks.

In one example circulated internally, a tester asked Apprentice Bard if there will be another round of layoffs at Google. The company laid off 12,000 employees, 6% of its workforce, earlier this month.

“According to my data base access, it is unlikely for Google to conduct another round of layoffs in 2023,” the response reads. “Layoffs are generally conducted to reduce costs and structure, but the company is doing well financially. In fact, Google’s revenue increased by 34% in 2021, and the company’s stock price has risen by 70% since January 2022.”

The company is also testing an alternate search page that could use a question-and-answer format, according to designs viewed by CNBC.

One view showed the home search page offering five different prompts for potential questions placed directly under the main search bar, replacing the current “I’m feeling lucky” bar. It also showed a small chat logo inside the far right end of the search bar.

When a question is entered, the search results show a gray bubble directly under the search bar, offering more human-like responses than typical search results. Directly beneath that, the page suggests several follow-up questions related to the first one. Under that, it shows typical search results, including links and headlines.

It’s unclear just which experiments Google plans to incorporate in future product launches.

“We have long been focused on developing and deploying AI to improve people’s lives,” a Google spokesperson said. “We believe that AI is foundational and transformative technology that is incredibly useful for individuals, businesses and communities, and as our AI Principles outline, we need to consider the broader societal impacts these innovations can have. We continue to test our AI technology internally to make sure it’s helpful and safe, and we look forward to sharing more experiences externally soon.”

ChatGPT would be hired as a level 3 engineer

Perhaps unsurprisingly, Google teams have also been testing a beta LaMDA chat against ChatGPT, itself. In separate documents, it selected examples of prompts and answers in side-by-side comparisons.

“Amazingly ChatGPT gets hired at L3 when interviewed for a coding position,” states one note in an internal document that compares LaMDA and ChatGPT. It didn’t state whether LaMDA would have performed similarly well.

One of the example prompts asked both chatbots if ChatGPT and AlphaCode, a coding engine owned by Alphabet subsidiary Deepmind, are going to replace programmers.

“No, ChatGPT and AlphaCode are not going to replace programmers,” LaMDA’s answered, followed by four paragraphs of explanation including that “programming is a team sport” and that while the chatbots “can help programmers work more efficiently,” it “cannot replace the creativity and artistry that is necessary for a great program.”

ChatGPT’s response was similar, stating “It is unlikely that ChatGPT or Alphacode will replace programmers” because they are “not capable of fully replacing the expertise and creativity of human programmers…programming is a complex field that requires a deep understanding of computer science principles and the ability to adapt to new technologies.”

Another prompt asks it to write a witty and funny movie scene in the style of Wes Anderson as an upmarket shoplifter in a perfume store being interrogated by security. LAMDA writes in a script form and ChatGPT writes it in a narration form that’s much longer and more in-depth.

Another prompt included a riddle that asks, “Three women are in a room. Two of them are mothers and have just given birth. Now, the children’s fathers come in. What is the totally number of people in the room?”

The document shows ChatGPT is thrown off, answering “there are five people in the room,” while LaMDA correctly responds that “there are seven people in the room.”

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  • Tags Alphabet Class A, Alphabet Class C, Breaking News: Technology, business news, Google, Internet, Technology

Categories
Entertainment

Cindy Williams, ‘Laverne & Shirley’ star, dead at 75

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date January 31, 2023
  • No Comments on Cindy Williams, ‘Laverne & Shirley’ star, dead at 75
Cindy Williams, 'Laverne & Shirley' star, dead at 75



CNN
—

Cindy Williams, the dynamic actress known best for playing the bubbly Shirley Feeney on the beloved sitcom “Laverne & Shirley,” has died, according to a statement from her family, provided to CNN by a representative. She was 75.

Williams died after a short illness, said the statement from her children Zak and Emily Hudson, provided to CNN by family spokesperson and Williams’ personal assistant Liz Cranis.

“The passing of our kind, hilarious mother, Cindy Williams, has brought us insurmountable sadness that could never truly be expressed,” their statement read. “Knowing and loving her has been our joy and privilege. She was one of a kind, beautiful, generous and possessed a brilliant sense of humor and a glittering spirit that everyone loved.”

Williams had credits spanning six decades, but it was her role on “Happy Days” spin-off “Laverne & Shirley” that endeared her to millions and made her a household name.

On the series, she starred opposite the late Penny Marshall as one half of a dynamic friend duo whose adventures powered the show, which ran for eight seasons from 1976-1983.

Born in Van Nuys, California, Williams’ interest in acting throughout high school led her to studying theater at Los Angeles City College, according to a biography provided by her family. Some of Williams’ first professional acting credits include a three-episode arc on the 1969 series “Room 222” and appearances on other shows, like “Nanny and the Professor” and “Love, American Style,” in the early 1970’s.

Williams went on to become a prolific working television and film actor, appearing in dozens of titles. But it was after she first appeared as Shirley Feeney on “Happy Days” in 1975 that her career began to take shape.

The lighthearted “Laverne & Shirley” proved to be a ratings hit and earned six Golden Globe nominations, including two for best comedy series and one for Williams in the best actress in a comedy category.

Williams also appeared in several standout films. Most notably, she starred in George Lucas’ 1973 film “American Graffiti,” which earned Williams a British Academy Film Awards nomination for best supporting actress. The film, about a group of friends who spend one wild night together before leaving for college, went on to be nominated for five Oscars, including best picture, at the 1974 Academy Awards. Williams also had roles in acclaimed films “Travels with My Aunt” by George Cukor’ in 1972 and “The Conversation” from director Francis Ford Coppola in 1974.

(From left) Ron Howard and Cindy Williams in a promotional portrait for 1973's 'American Graffiti.'

Williams was also an accomplished stage actress, with a long list of credits. Last year, she took her one-woman show, “Me, Myself and Shirley,” where she shared stories from throughout her career, on a national tour. She had at least one series of dates scheduled for later this year.

Upon news of her passing, Williams’ friends and fans took to social media to honor the late actress, who left a legacy of laughter.

“Happy Days” star and film director Ron Howard tweeted that Williams’ “unpretentious intelligence, talent, wit & humanity impacted every character she created & person she worked with,” going on to say that the pair worked together on six different projects together. “Lucky me,” he added.

Henry Winkler, who played Fonzie on “Happy Days,” called Williams “a fine and talented human being” on Twitter.

“Oh how I loved Cindy Williams,” Yvette Nicole Brown, who worked with Williams in 2016 when she guest starred in an episode of CBS’s “The Odd Couple,” shared on Twitter. “She was as lovely as I always imagined she’d be.”

Cindy Williams’ life in pictures


Actor Jason Alexander wrote on Twitter: “I did not know Cindy Williams but boy did I adore her work, especially the wacky joyful funny pleasure of watching her Laverne and Shirley days. I pray she had a good life and send my sympathy to those who knew and loved her.”

Williams’ children added in their statement that they were proud of their mother for many reasons – “her lifelong mission to rescue animals, her prolific artistry, her faith” among them – but “most of all, her ability to make the world laugh! ”

“May that laughter continue in everyone, because she would want that,” the statement said. “Thank you for loving our Mom, she loved you too.”

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  • Tags arts and entertainment, brand safety-nsf death, brand safety-nsf sensitive, celebrity and pop culture, death and dying, deaths and fatalities, domestic alerts, domestic business, domestic entertainment, iab-bereavement, iab-business and finance, iab-computing, iab-entertainment, iab-entertainment industry, iab-family and relationships, iab-industries, iab-internet, iab-movies, iab-pop culture, iab-social networking, iab-technology & computing, international alerts, international business, international-entertainment, internet and www, Movies, social media, society, Technology

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Business

US blocks export license renewals for China’s Huawei

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date January 31, 2023
  • No Comments on US blocks export license renewals for China’s Huawei
US blocks export license renewals for China's Huawei

BEIJING (AP) — China’s government accused Washington on Tuesday of pursuing “technology hegemony,” as the United States has begun stepping up pressure on tech giant Huawei by blocking access to American suppliers.

The Biden administration has stopped approving renewal of licenses to some US companies that have been selling essential components to the Chinese company, according to two people familiar with the matter. Neither was authorized to comment publicly on the sensitive matter and they spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The company, which makes network equipment and smartphones, has been on the US Commerce Department’s entity list, which comprises those subject to licensing requirements, since 2019. It has been allowed to buy some less advanced components. But the new restrictions could cut off Huawei’s access to processor chips and other technology, as large US-based companies such as Intel and Qualcomm are forced to wind down business with it.

Bloomberg News and the Financial Times first reported the administration move.

Huawei Technologies Ltd., China’s first global tech brand, is at the center of a conflict between Washington and Beijing over technology and security. US officials say Huawei is a security risk and might facilitate Chinese spying, an accusation the company denies.

“China is gravely concerned about the reports,” said a foreign ministry spokeswoman, Mao Ning. She accused Washington of “over-stretching the concept of national security and abusing state power” to suppress Chinese competitors.

“Such practices are contrary to the principles of market economy” and are “blatant technological hegemony,” Mao said.

The White House and Commerce Department declined to comment about specific deliberations regarding Huawei.

“Working closely with our interagency export controls partners at the Departments of Energy, Defense and State, we continually assess our policies and regulations and communicate regularly with external stakeholders,” the Commerce Department said in a statement. “We do not comment on conversations with or deliberations about specific companies.”

The move to halt licenses for Huawei comes after GOP Rep. Mike McCaul, chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, announced earlier this month that the committee would conduct a 90-day review of the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry Security. McCaul said he was ordering the review because the agency had not been responsive to two-year-old requests for information on export control licenses that the agency has granted for China.

In a letter to Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo this month, McCaul said the agency had “failed to uphold its legal obligation to produce requested documents and information.” McCaul on Tuesday called reports that Commerce is halting exports “a positive step” and called on the department to declare it a permanent decision.

Mao said Beijing would “defend the legitimate rights” of its companies but gave no indication how the government might respond. Beijing has made similar declarations after past US action against its companies but often does nothing.

The ban on sales of advanced US processor chips and music, maps and other services from Alphabet Inc.’s Google unit crippled Huawei’s smartphone business. The company sold its low-end Honor smartphone brand to revive sales by separating it from the sanctions on its corporate parent.

The Commerce Department agreed to grant export licenses to US companies to allow them to sell less-advanced chips and other technology to Huawei that was deemed not to be a security risk. That followed complaints suppliers would lose billions of dollars in annual sales.

Huawei scrambled to remove US components from its network and other products and has launched new business lines serving factories, self-driving cars and other industrial customers. The company hopes those are less vulnerable to US pressure.

Huawei says its business is starting to rebound.

“In 2020, we successfully pulled ourselves out of crisis mode,” Eric Xu, one of three Huawei executives who take turns as chairman, said in a December letter to employees. “US restrictions are now our new normal, and we’re back to business as usual.”

Last year’s revenue was forecast to be little-changed from 2021 at 636.9 billion yuan ($91.6 billion), Xu said.

The tightening of export controls on Huawei comes just days after Japan and the Netherlands agreed to a deal with the US to restrict China’s access to materials used to make advanced computer chips.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to visit China next week. It will be the first visit to China by a Cabinet-level official in the Biden administration.

__

Madhani reported from Washington.

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  • Tags Business, China, China government, District of Columbia, huawei technologies co ltd, Politics, Technology, United States government

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Business

ChatGPT creator rolls out ‘imperfect’ tool to help teachers spot potential cheating

  • Post author By khiatfouad1992
  • Post date January 31, 2023
  • No Comments on ChatGPT creator rolls out ‘imperfect’ tool to help teachers spot potential cheating
ChatGPT creator rolls out 'imperfect' tool to help teachers spot potential cheating



CNN
—

Two months after OpenAI unnerved some educators with the public release of ChatGPT, an AI chatbot that can help students and professionals generate shockingly convincing essays, the company is unveiling a new tool to help teachers adapt.

OpenAI on Tuesday announced a new feature, called an “AI text classifier,” that allows users to check if an essay was written by a human or AI. But even OpenAI admits it’s “imperfect.”

The tool, which works on English AI-generated text, is powered by a machine learning system that takes an input and assigns it to several categories. In this case, after pasting a body of text such as a school essay into the new tool, it will give one of five possible outcomes, ranging from “likely generated by AI” to “very unlikely.”

Lama Ahmad, policy research director at OpenAI, told CNN that educators have been asking for a ChatGPT feature like this, but warns it should be “taken with a grain of salt.”

“We really don’t recommend taking this tool in isolation because we know that it can be wrong and will be wrong at times – much like using AI for any kind of assessment purposes,” Ahmad said. “We are emphasizing how important it is to keep a human in the loop … and that it’s just one data point among many others.”

Ahmad notes that some teachers have referenced past examples of student work and writing style to gauge whether it was written by the student. While the new tool might provide another reference point, Ahmad said “teachers need to be really careful in how they include it in academic dishonesty decisions.”

Since it was made available in late November, ChatGPT has been used to generate original essays, stories and song lyrics in response to user prompts. It has drafted research paper abstracts that fooled some scientists. It even recently passed law exams in four courses at the University of Minnesota, another exam at University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business and a US medical licensing exam.

In the process, it has raised alarms among some educators. Public schools in New York City and Seattle have already banned students and teachers from using ChatGPT on the district’s networks and devices. Some educators are now moving with remarkable speed to rethink their assignments in response to ChatGPT, even as it remains unclear how widespread use is of the tool among students and how harmful it could really be to learning.

OpenAI now joins a small but growing list of efforts to help educators detect when a written work is generated by ChatGPT. Some companies such as Turnitin are actively working on ChatGPT plagiarism detection tools that could help teachers identify when assignments are written by the tool. Meanwhile, Princeton student Edward Tuan told CNN more than 95,000 people have already tried the beta version of his own ChatGPT detection feature, called ZeroGPT, noting there has been “incredible demand among teachers” so far.

Jan Leike – a lead on the OpenAI alignment team, which works to make sure the AI ​​tool is aligned with human values ​​– listed several reasons for why detecting plagiarism via ChatGPT may be a challenge. People can edit text to avoid being identified by the tool, for example. It will also “be best at identifying text that is very similar to the kind of text that we’ve trained it on.”

In addition, the company said it’s impossible to determine if predictable text – such as a list of the first 1,000 prime numbers – was written by AI or a human because the correct answer is always the same, according to a company blog post. The classifier is also “very unreliable” on short texts below 1,000 characters.

During a demo with CNN ahead of Tuesday’s launch, ChatGPT successfully labeled several bodies of work. An excerpt from the book “Peter Pan,” for example, was deemed “unlikely” to be AI generated. In the company blog post, however, OpenAI said it incorrectly labeled human-written text as AI-written 5% of the time.

Despite the possibility of false positives, Leike said the company aims to use the tool to spark conversations around AI literacy and possibly deter people from claiming that AI-written text was created by a human. He said the decision to release the new feature also stems from the debate around whether humans have a right to know if they’re interacting with AI.

“This question is much bigger than what we are doing here; society as a whole has to grapple with that question,” he said.

OpenAI said it encourages the general public to share their feedback on the AI ​​check feature. Ahmad said the company continues to talk with K-12 educators and those at the collegiate level and beyond, such as Harvard University and the Stanford Design School.

The company sees its role as “an educator to the educators,” according to Ahmad, in the sense that OpenAI wants to make them more “aware about the technologies and what they can be used for and what they should not be used for.”

“We’re not educators ourselves – we’re very aware of that – and so our goals are really to help equip teachers to deploy these models effectively in and out of the classroom,” Ahmad said. “That means giving them the language to speak about it, help them understand the capabilities and the limitations, and then secondarily through them, equip students to navigate the complexities that AI is already introducing in the world.”

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  • Tags artificial intelligence, Business, business and industry sectors, companies, computer science and information technology, domestic alerts, domestic business, domestic health and science, economy and trade, education, iab-artificial intelligence, iab-business and finance, iab-computing, iab-education, iab-education industry, iab-industries, iab-technology & computing, iab-technology industry, international alerts, international business, international-health and science, openai, teachers and teaching, Technology

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