Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 250: AI News That Matters - April 15th, 2024
Episode Date: April 15, 2024Will Google be (more?) relevant now with its AI announcements? Why did Adobe reportedly train its AI image model with.... AI images? And is OpenAI in trouble with YouTube? We've got those answers... and more with our weekly AI News That Matters segment.Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan questions on AIRelated Episodes:Ep 204: Google Gemini Advanced – 7 things you need to knowEp 211: OpenAI’s Sora – The larger impact that no one’s talking aboutUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTimestamps:02:30 Google's new AI features from Cloud Next.05:40 Google announces Google Vids and Gemini 1.5.08:23 OpenAI's recent firings and internal investigation.13:23 YouTube CEO warns against unauthorized use of content.16:28 Debates on copyright and AI-generated content.19:29 AI image generators raise copyright ownership concerns.21:45 Adobe under scrutiny for using copyrighted material.25:10 Adobe pays creators, future job security uncertain.Topics Covered in this Episode:1. Google's AI announcements2. OpenAI's data leak and staffing changes3. YouTube's CEO's concerns about OpenAI4. Controversies around Adobe's AI image model, Firefly5. Adobe's incentives for AI training data collectionKeywords:Google AI, Adobe, OpenAI, data leak, AI news, generative AI, AI developments, AI tools, software, Google's new AI features, Google Workspace, AI podcast, Google Cloud Next Conference, Google Vids, AI video, AI image, Midjourney, Firefly, AI model garden, everyday AI, training AI models, copyright infringement, Neil Mohan, YouTube, artificial intelligence, ChatGPT, YouTube's terms of service, AI transparency, Sora model, AI ethics.Send Everyday AI and Jordan a text message. (We can't reply back unless you leave contact info) Start Here ▶️Not sure where to start when it comes to AI? Start with our Start Here Series. You can listen to the first drop -- Episode 691 -- or get free access to our Inner Cricle community and all episodes: StartHereSeries.com Also, here's a link to the entire series on a Spotify playlist.
Transcript
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This is the Everyday AI Show, the Everyday Podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips.
Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business, and everyday life.
Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live in Adobe Firefly, the All In One Creative AI Studio.
Just describe what you want to create and the assistant handles the rest,
orchestrating multi-step workflows across Photoshop, Premiere Express, and more in one conversational interface.
You direct the outcome.
The assistant accelerates execution.
Will Google's AI announcements finally make them a little more relevant in the generative AI game?
What's going on with Adobe?
And also, open AI in a data leak?
All right.
There's a lot going on in the world of AI news.
We're going to get to all of that today and more.
What's going on, y'all?
My name's Jordan Wilson.
I'm the host of Everyday AI.
Thanks for joining us. This is for you. We are a daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter
helping everyday people like you and me, not just learn generative AI and what's going on there,
but how we can use all of these news developments, new tools, new tips, new softwares,
how we can actually leverage this to grow our companies and to grow our careers.
So on most Mondays, we come to you live and bring you the AI news that matters.
So that's what we're doing today. Well, a little bit. If you're joining on the podcast,
you probably won't see or, you know, feel anything different.
But for our live stream audience, you might notice I have these kind of vacation vibes going on.
That's because, yes, I'm actually on vacation.
But it is so important to stay up with the AI news that take a little break on my Sunday afternoon
to make sure that you have the news that you need for the rest of the week.
So, hey, if you're joining us live Monday, I might technically be on a roller coaster or something.
But make sure you still leave your comment.
Let me know what is the news that matters to you.
what questions, what is actually going to impact your company or your career.
And hey, there's, who knows, probably the fact that I'm, you know, recording this on a Sunday,
there's probably going to be some huge breaking news.
But don't worry, we'll still have it in our newsletter.
So make sure if you haven't already, please go to your everyday AI.com and sign up for that
free daily newsletter.
Every single Monday through Friday, it comes out so you can keep up to date and not just keep up,
but how, but you can get ahead.
And I tell people, it's like a first.
generative AI University on there, we have access to now like 250 backlog episodes of great
content around generative AI from some global thought leaders. All right, but let's just get straight
into it. What is the AI news that matters for you for the week of April 15th? So let's start
with I guess the big piece of news here. So Google. Google from its Google Cloud Next conference
introduced a lot of new generative AI.
features. So we're going to go over them kind of in Bullet Point. We've already talked about them
multiple times in the newsletter already. But let's just dive straight into it. So Google has
unveiled a lot of new AI announcements from its Cloud Next 2024 presentation. So Google workspace
users will soon have access to these new AI power tools to enhance their productivity.
Let me just hit pause there and preface this. We hope, right? So, you know, Google said this will be a
general release. So it should, in theory, be rolling out to everyone. If you listen to the show at
all, you know that I normally have a little bit of a bone to pick with Google because, you know,
as great as their, you know, new generative AI features seem or sound, it has been so far very
difficult. Even if you are on a paid enterprise account or on a paid advanced account,
it's been very difficult so far if you are a Google workspace user to take advantage of all of these
generative AI features from Google, right?
So as an example, here at everyday AI, we, you know, our team uses Google Workspace and we pay,
I don't know, $15, $20 a month, something like that to use all these features.
But it's, we still can't connect our data.
So, you know, this has been six months in the making.
So hopefully this kind of this signaling from Google that this is going to be a general,
general release that means that, you know, for a lot of people that have been waiting months or more than a year
to use all of these Google AI features at their, you know, small, medium-sized business,
connect all their data if they wish to, we'll have that option.
So we'll see just how to get that out of the way, right?
We don't just spoon-fage-you marketing talk.
We like to tell it to you how it is.
All right, so let's go over some of these newer AI features.
So the Help Me Write feature, which a lot of people have had technically beta access to
for many months should be rolling out in a general release.
And the Help Me Write will feature inside Google will now allow users to trigger
generative AI with their voice, making it even more convenient to start writing
or to continue writing.
So whether you're writing an email inside Google Docs, etc.
Gmail users will now have the option to polish draft.
Hey, hey, look at that.
Google, using our polish from Prime Pop Polish, right?
So Gmail users will have the option to polish draft using Gemini
to enhance the quality of their email drafts.
Google Sheets as well, getting some updates.
So they've introduced alerts for cell changes to keep everyone updated
and emphasize new templates to stream,
to streamline spreadsheet creation.
So if you're working with your team,
Google Docs will now support tabs about time,
allowing users to work on multiple documents
within the same file efficiently.
Google Chat, now integrating Gemini
to summarize messages and translate conversations
into 69 languages,
as well as Google Meet should be offering
automatic transcription about time
and translation features
with the ability to take notes during meetings
as an optional add-on for $10 per user per month.
So, you know, there's a lot more, but probably one of the biggest ones, saving for the last year.
So the highlight, I would say, of their announcement was Google Vids, which is a new AI-powered
tool that helps users create videos by generating storyboards and compiling rough drafts using
various media elements.
So there was actually a lot more happening at Google that we, you know, already talked about
in the newsletter, but let me just tell you a couple more.
So obviously, the general availability of Gemini 1.5 Pro, so that's Google's large language
model with one million token context, which is huge.
You know, Google also talked about agents, you know, pretty a lot of talk, actually,
around agents and the ability to kind of build, you know, agents that can connect with your data
and perform certain tasks, right?
So right now, I think when people think of generative AI, they think of it, oh, it's just
kind of, you know, helps me write content or, you know, photos or videos. And that's definitely
not the case, right? I've been talking about that here on the everyday AI show now for a year,
you know, talking about how agents, I think, are going to be much more impactful, much sooner
than people realize. So that, I believe that is reflected here, right? In Google's, really just
heavy marketing their new agents. Also, support for NVIDIA's Blackwell GPU system, which I think
should be pretty huge. Also, the vertex AI model garden, which, you know, so in Google's
AI kind of their vertex, I won't call it a sandbox per se, but it's where all their different
AI models are connected. The ability to switch between, I think it was dozens of different models.
So obviously, Google's Gemini, Anthropics, Claude, Lama from Meta, Mistral, et cetera.
So a lot of open models, as well as Claude from Anthropic, as well as their vertex.
AI agent builder.
So a lot going on at this Google Cloud Next conference.
Again, we'll be detailing it even more in the newsletter.
All right.
Next but not least.
So Open AI has fired two prominent researchers over alleged information leaks.
So according to a report from the information, Open AI has dismissed two researchers.
And hopefully I get the names right.
I'm probably not going to.
but Leopold Ashton Brenner and Pevel Ismalov definitely didn't get those right,
but he, you know, has fired Leopold and Pavel for suspected information leaks.
Again, that is according to reports from the information.
So Leopold is known for his work on AI safety and was reportedly aligned with open AIs chief
scientist, Ila Chutivar.
So this incident marked one of the first public staffing changes since,
CEO, Sam Altman's return to the board in March following an inquiry by OpenAI's nonprofit board
that cleared him of previous allegations going all the way back to his November firing and rehiring.
So yeah, there's been a lot of kind of messy behind the scenes stuff going on in the last couple of
months from Open AI.
But it had kind of been quiet after, you know, Sam Altman was, you know, kind of rehired back on as CEO.
You know, he kind of made the media rounds, you know, kind of really, I think did a really good job.
kind of controlling that narrative.
So it's been kind of a little silent in the, you know, open AI drama now until
these recent fly rings.
And so reportedly the internal investigation revealed that both of these individuals were
part of Open AI's safety, safety team adding a layer of complexity to the company's
internal dynamics.
So, you know, right now we don't really know what data was leaked, but, I mean, you have
to be paying attention to this.
And it matters, right?
because OpenAI has nearly 200 million users, right?
And it is the fastest growing, you know, app or software ever, you know, in human history.
I mean, people talk about threads from meta.
I don't know if that counts per se, right?
Because meta, all these new users that they had signed up for threads were essentially
existing users from their other platforms.
So I would still argue that OpenAI and ChatGPT is the largest or the fact.
fastest growing software ever.
So anytime a company that is still young, it's still in startup mode technically,
I think it's somewhere around 500 employees.
First of all, I don't think Open AI gets enough credit,
firstly for what they've accomplished with such a small team,
but also the fact that we haven't had a data leak in the past two years since the world
has been talking about Open AI.
So again, we don't know exactly what was leaked here.
all just according to a report from the information.
So we'll be linking that if you do want to read that.
But it could have, you know, honestly, just huge rippling impacts
across the industry, because here's why.
I think there's, you know, still hundreds of thousands of large companies
here in the United States that are kind of, you know,
one foot in generative AI, kind of one foot in the generative AI pool and one foot out.
And I think that this is going to cause a little bit of
of hesitation for some of these companies to kind of go all in into the, into the generative AI
pool, so to speak, which, you know, that's on them to make their own calls on that.
But I think that you have to look at this as part of a broader picture of data security, right?
I mean, look at over the past couple of years, there's been huge confirmed data leaks from,
you know, big Fortune 100 companies.
You know, it's like I feel you hear about these almost every month.
So is it alarming to reportedly have some data leaks that lead to firings?
Not necessarily, but I think it is different when you're talking about a company like OpenAI.
And I think that people for the most part haven't really been sure.
Like, oh, should I upload data, right?
Like, you know, I know there is a big Home Depot, you know, data leak a couple of years ago.
But it's like, all right, well, you know, aside from if you, you know, have an account on Home Depot.com,
which I don't know how many people do.
You know, it's like, okay, you know, maybe your credit card information was in there somewhere,
not good.
But aside from that, it's like people aren't necessarily uploading a lot of their information
to Home Depot or to a lot of these other companies, you know,
that have gone through these kind of data leaks or kind of these scandals in terms of,
you know, keeping consumer and client information private.
So I think that's a little different because people haven't really known how they should be using
you know, large language models like chat, GBT, like Anthropics Claw, you know,
so all these kind of generative AI tools that allow you to upload information.
I think a lot of people have been uploading their information, maybe in a lot of cases
when they shouldn't, right?
So I should, as I normally do, put the preface out there that unless you're on an enterprise
plan, you should not be uploading confidential, sensitive, proprietary information into
these large segments models.
But I think so many people are, right?
So that's why I think you do have to pay attention to this report.
And I'm sure in the coming weeks and months, we're going to see a little bit more information come out of it.
But you have to be paying attention to it.
All right.
Next, speaking of open AI, so YouTube's CEO kind of fired some warning shot at Open AIs for its reported training practices for its AI image or sorry, its AI video model, SORA.
All right.
So YouTube CEO, Neil Mulhan, has.
mentioned that if OpenAI had used content from YouTube to train its new AI video program,
SORA, it would be considered a clear violation, in quotes, of YouTube's terms of service.
So this is following the story from last month where OpenAI's CTO, Mira, Muratai, was unable to
confirm the type of content used to train SORA in an interview with, I believe it was the Wall Street Journal,
where, and this was raising a lot of transparency issues, right?
So we actually played it a short clip here on the show a couple of weeks ago,
where she kind of was asked a somewhat simple question about,
hey, how is this, you know, this new model from Open AI called SORA,
which produces amazing results.
So, you know, text to video.
And she was asked just kind of point blank, hey, how was this trained?
Was it trained on, you know, YouTube videos?
Is it trained on social media?
And she kind of hesitated almost in a like, why did she hesitate like that kind of way?
And I think that this kind of implied to everyone that SORA's trained on the open Internet.
But guess what?
The open Internet obviously trains or sorry, the open Internet obviously contains a lot of copyrighted
materials.
Right.
So this is where we get into this new kind of report featuring this quote that we just heard
or this kind of warning shot that we just heard from YouTube CEO, Neil Mohan.
So Mohan has emphasized that creators who upload their content to YouTube expect their work to be used in accordance with the platform's terms of service.
And any unauthorized scraping or downloading of YouTube's content would breach those terms.
So although Mohan did not explicitly confirm whether OpenAI did actually use YouTube content to develop SORA,
he did highlighted that such an action would pose a significant issue.
So obviously, Open AI has faced a lot of scrutiny over the training of its new AI video
model, SORA, amidst all these concerns about copyright infringement and data sourcing,
right?
So especially, you know, in a couple of weeks since this interview with Mira, Miratai,
like a lot of people have just been saying, okay, well, so if she stumbled on a very basic
question like that, you have to kind of assume that, you know,
that open AI just use the open internet, everything out there.
So copyrighted materials and everything.
Again, that's the assumption that, you know, kind of everyone is under now.
So we'll see where this goes.
And maybe we'll save this for a hot take Tuesday, but I would really keep an eye on this
kind of, you know, YouTube, which is obviously owned by Google, which is a big competitor
now to Open AI, right?
Because Open AI has, you know, partnership with Microsoft, which is probably Google's chief
competitor. So here you kind of have, you know, Google versus Microsoft in the lens of YouTube
versus Open AI. So I do see, you know, I've been saying this for a long time, look at the
kind of the Open AI versus New York Time lawsuit, whenever that may get settled. I doubt it's
actually going to go to a trial. But whenever that gets settled, that's the first big domino to fall.
So maybe in theory, this could be one of the next, you know, kind of this YouTube versus Open
AI. And, you know, I know open AI has kind of made the case for like, hey, what is actually copyrighted?
Like, right? Like is copyrighted material what it meant decades ago? So I think we're going to be hearing a lot about the concept of copyright, copyright law. What does it mean if you share something online, even if you are, you know, protected by a, you know, YouTube or a meta when you upload this content there? What does it mean? And what does it mean or will it mean when, you know, so many or so much of the content that we
are going to be uploading will be AI generated, right?
I can see a time in the very near future, whether it's months or years from now,
when so much of the information that is even uploaded to a YouTube or something like that
is from a, you know, program such as SORA or maybe runway or mid-journey, right,
like as these other companies are starting to add kind of this video capability
after everyone saw the literal jaw-dropping capabilities of SORA.
So I do think that's so much of what's going to be playing out online, you know, at least YouTube,
social media.
And who knows, maybe, you know, eventually we'll see it in, you know, mainstream media, right?
When you have your B-roll, right, when someone's talking on the screen, maybe like right now, right?
Maybe in the future when I'm talking about something, we're going to see real-time AI-generated
video that's splashed up there.
So it's like, okay, well, who owns it?
What was it trained on?
And who's ultimately getting paid for it, right?
So definitely something to keep an eye on.
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Related story, right?
So Adobe has been accused of training its ethical AI image model on AI images.
Yeah, kind of inception here, but let's break it down.
So there's been a lot of ethical concerns arise over Adobe's AI image.
generator Firefly.
So Adobe's AI ImageGenter Firefly is known for its ethical training on license stock
images.
But it has recently faced controversy as it was revealed in a recent report that some
images were sourced from a competitor Mid-Journey and potentially without proper licensing.
But then also it's like how can you license images from a company like Mid-Journey
that is technically training in theory.
off copyrighted materials, right?
So you get this whole cycle of like,
where does the new content start, the AI image generating begin, right?
So it's a little messy.
But according to the report,
approximately 5% of the images used to train Firefly
were from questionable sources,
such as other AI image generators.
But Adobe assures us that all non-human pictures
are still copyright safe.
That's the other thing, right?
So with so many of these AI image generators, like you technically don't own the copyright,
right?
So if I go in there and if I, you know, create a bunch of images with a mid-journey or, you know,
Dahl-Lee from Open AI, right, I don't technically own the copyright on those.
They're technically kind of copyrighted by no one because they're, you know, it's, there's no
technical original work being made there, or at least that's the argument that people are making.
So it does get a little confusing, but Adobe has claimed that every image submitted to Adobe stock,
which is where they are training their Firefly model on, including those generated with AI,
undergo a strict moderation process to ensure legal compliance.
So despite the training data controversy, Adobe maintains that images created with Firefly are safe to use without copyright infringement.
Also, worth noting Adobe is reportedly working on an AI.
video generator in his rumor to be compensating artists per minute for video clips,
showcasing a potential shift toward more artist-friendly practices.
So, hey, speaking of that, let's just go ahead and wrap up our AI news that matters with
exactly that.
So Adobe is offering incentives for AI training data collection.
So Adobe is investing in its generative AI platform, Firefly, like we just talked about,
by offering up to $120 to photographers and other artists for submitting short,
including videographers, but for submitting short video clips of everyday actions and emotions for AI training.
This is according to a Bloomberg report.
So the submitted videos should showcase everyday actions, motions, basic anatomy, and people
using objects like smartphones, fitness gear, etc., while avoiding copyrighted material, nudity,
or offensive content.
So according to the Bloomberg report,
contributors can earn between $2.60 to $7.25 per minute of submitted video
providing an opportunity to earn money from existing video content.
So again, you know, our last kind of story led straight into this one, right?
So first we talk about how Adobe is, you know, kind of facing a little bit of heat for reportedly
using AI images to train its A.
model Firefly, right? And you have to hand it to Adobe because they've, I think they've been
probably one of the leaders in terms of creating models in an ethical way, right? Like, we don't
hear a whole lot from the, you know, from the Googles, from the Microsoft, Open AI, Anthropic,
mid-jurney, runway, peak of labs, right? Like, we don't hear a lot specifically on, okay,
you're training on the internet, but doesn't that include a lot of copyrighted materials, right?
it seems like a lot of the bigger companies aren't really talking about that,
or they're just kind of waiting to, you know, settle some of these cases, right?
And there's obviously been some huge multimillion dollar annual partnerships for these big companies,
you know, like Google, Anthropic, Open AI, et cetera, are forming these multimillion dollars
annual partnerships with these big, you know, content agencies, essentially, right,
to use all of their content to train their models.
But what about all the models that were trained before these partnerships were even formed, right?
So Adobe has been going about it reportedly a different way, you know, really just training its models on all of the information and all of the content that it had access or it had the kind of legal rights to train its models on until this story, kind of these stories came out like one right after another, right?
where first Adobe was apparently using, you know, small percentage, but, you know,
reportedly 5% of the total that it was training its model on were from mid journey, right,
which is tricky because all of those were, you know, in theory, trained on copyrighted
materials, right?
We talked about that here in the show all the time.
You can just say, you know, give me a picture of a superhero in mid journey and it's
going to spit out copyrighted materials, right?
You're going to get an Ironman and, you know, Superman and all these things, even if you
aren't asking for it, right?
because the model has been trained on, presumably a lot of copyrighted material.
So that does really throw a wrench in Adobe's whole, you know, super ethical, like ethically trained campaign.
I think it would have been better for them to either, hey, we're going to quote unquote, suffer in quality or we're going to be a little slower by not using any of these, you know, any of these AI images in general.
Because once you do that, you really, I'm not saying you close the book on your case that, oh, we're going about this in the right ethical way.
but I think you really soften your ability to really take a hard stance that's saying,
like, hey, we are the super ethical AI model.
So I don't know if this was intentional.
If this was accidental, it could be hard, right?
Because it does appear according to this report that some users are submitting AI generated
content to Adobe's stock services.
So, you know, really it's going to be interesting how this plays out as well as, you know,
kind of interesting also that Adobe is paying, you know, paying creators to say like,
hey, go, go shoot some videos.
We're working on an AI model.
So, you know, we're going to pay you, which I like that concept.
But also, hey, as a former, you know, way back in my former life, I did a lot of,
you know, videography, photography, right?
So, you know, this was obviously like, you know, almost 15 plus years ago.
But still, right?
So they are paying a lot of these creators, a lot of these,
videographers, you know, dimes on the dollar to essentially say like, hey, in the future,
a lot of the clients that are maybe paying you for this right now, right, are going to
just not be paying you, right? They're going to be using our models instead. So it is this kind of
this weird state of creativity that we're in right now where, hey, I do like this, that Adobe is,
you know, making this very ethical effort to pay creators for specific footage. But all they're
really doing is saying, hey, creators, we're going to pay you for this because in two years
or 18 months or five years, all the people that are paying you to create content right now
may not be paying you. They may just be using our services as well. So it is kind of this
sticky gray area that we're in right now in the creative space where, you know, either
these companies are just training models off the open internet or they're paying creators.
But, you know, essentially that means that they're going to be getting paid less by their
their current clients, current businesses that they're working with in the future.
That's definitely a reality.
All right.
There's always more.
So if you haven't already, there's a lot of news there.
There's more.
So make sure if you haven't already, please go to your everyday AI.com.
Sign up for that free daily newsletter.
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Normally we do the show live Monday.
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