Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - EP 399: AI News That Matters - November 11th, 2024

Episode Date: November 12, 2024

How is OpenAI expanding partnerships with the U.S. government? Why is Salesforce hiring 1,000 humans to sell an AI that is supposed to sell better than humans? What will Donald Trump's impact on ...AI be? And is Microsoft giving up on Copilot Pro? So many AI questions.... we've got the answers. We bring you the AI news that matters. Newsletter: Sign up for our free daily newsletterMore on this Episode: Episode PageJoin the discussion: Ask Jordan questions on AIUpcoming Episodes: Check out the upcoming Everyday AI Livestream lineupWebsite: YourEverydayAI.comEmail The Show: info@youreverydayai.comConnect with Jordan on LinkedInTimestamps:06:49 Salesforce hiring despite AI, future job concerns.09:51 Court dismisses copyright lawsuit against OpenAI.12:18 Trump's return may reshape U.S. AI policy.15:48 Tariffs impact AI costs; Trump's policies reshape tech.18:39 Microsoft 365 price increase reflects added value.21:42 Google's Jarvis AI preview leaked, quickly removed.24:57 System orchestrates agents for diverse task management.29:15 OpenAI explores synthetic data amid training challenges.33:39 AI updates: Partnerships, hiring, lawsuit, uncertain AI future.Keywords:Jarvis AI, Google, Chrome extension store, user experience, online shopping, travel planning, permission requirements, Anthropic, Microsoft Magenta 1, AI agents, open-source auto gen framework, GPT-4, OpenAI, Orion model, synthetic data, Jordan Wilson, lazy AI usage, low-quality output, AI development, US federal government, NASA, IRS, Salesforce Agent Force, copyright lawsuit, Donald Trump, AI policy, Microsoft Copilot Pro, AI hardware costs, tech industry, Chicago.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. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 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. Open AI has expanded partnerships with the U.S. government.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Salesforce has hired 1,000 humans to sell AI. What will new president-elect Donald Trump's impact on AIB? And is Microsoft giving up on co-pilot pro? We're to be answering those questions and a lot more today on everyday. What's going on, y'all? My name is Jordan Wilson, and I'm the host of Everyday AI. And this thing is for you. It is your daily live stream podcast and free daily newsletter, helping us all learn and leverage generative AI to grow our companies and our careers. So if that sounds like you, you are in the right place. If you're listening on the podcast, please make sure, as always, to check out your show notes for more information. Most importantly, a link to our website. Please, if you haven't already, go to Your EverydayAI.com and sign up for that free. daily newsletter. Each and every day, we recap the day's episode as well as give you all of the information that you need happening in the world of AI because there is a ton. Speaking of a ton happening in the world of AI, we do the AI News That Matters show almost every single Monday,
Starting point is 00:01:57 like today, even though it's technically as I record this, I'm in the future. I'm wrapping up a nice little 10-day trip for celebrating my 10-year anniversary with my wife. So, super excited for all of you that continue to, you know, tune in and left me some nice comments. I very much appreciate that. But I will be back in Chicago in like 36 hours. And speaking of Chicago, still getting this piece figured out, but should be at the Microsoft conference. So if you're going to be at the Microsoft conference next week, I believe it kicks off November 19th here in Chicago. Do let me know because, yeah, I believe we'll, I'll be attending at least, may even be broadcasting live. So make sure to pay attention for.
Starting point is 00:02:41 updates on that. All right, enough chit-chat, y'all. Let's get into the AI news that matters for the week of November 11th. And again, apologies, y'all. I'm in a hotel room. I don't have my normal sound equipment, camera lighting, all that stuff. And I got completely burned, right? So if you're joining the live stream, you're like, why is, why is your face so red? It's because I have been enjoying some sunshine. All right. Let's get into it. So the federal government, has expanded its use of open AIs chat GPT technology. So according to reports from Fed scoop, the federal government is increasingly investing in generative AI technology,
Starting point is 00:03:24 particularly through partnerships with open AI. So a lot of federal organizations, according to this report, are now starting to use the enterprise version of chat GPD. That includes NASA. So NASA has committed to using open AIs tools, having acquired an annual license. for ChatGBTGPT Enterprise after initial tests last year. The IRS, the Internal Revenue Service, just bought 150, according to reports.
Starting point is 00:03:51 150 Chad GPD Enterprise licenses for the Department of Treasury, although details on that remains unclear. Also, Los Alamos National Laboratory is also utilizing, is it laboratory? Yeah, laboratory is utilizing ChatGPT Enterprise as part of its research collaboration with Open AI. So OpenAI's vice president of global affairs revealed that the U.S. agency for international development was the first federal customer for ChatGBTGPT enterprise as the company aims to make its technology more accessible to federal agencies.
Starting point is 00:04:26 So Open AI is also partnering with the Air Force Research Laboratory. Laboratory, there we go. There's the word. I told you all, I was on vacation. So to explore how Jet AI can reduce administrative burdens. and enhance efficiency in military operations. So this partnership marks OpenAI's first collaboration within the Defense Department, though it has worked with other components previously.
Starting point is 00:04:54 So the spokesperson from OpenAI assured that the collaboration right now between the U.S. federal governments and OpenAI is only involving unclassified systems, adhering to usage policies that prohibit harmful applications of their technology. But y'all, let me just say this. For all those companies out there, and maybe this is your company, maybe it's not. But for all companies are like, oh, our data is too sensitive for chat GPT enterprise. Like, no, it's not, right? You probably use a cloud service.
Starting point is 00:05:28 You use Microsoft Cloud, Google Cloud, etc. It is the same technology. So, yeah, companies hire us, you know, to teach them chat GPT Enterprise. and the security is just like you would see, like I said, out of cloud storage. So if your company lives on the cloud, which almost all companies do, right? Yeah, you might have some things on-prem, some things off-prem. But for the most part, I mean, even the federal government is using ChatGBTBT Enterprise. So yeah, like, why aren't you?
Starting point is 00:05:57 Why is it your company? Let me know in the comments, actually. I'm always curious. All right. Our next piece of AI news that matters. Salesforce, according to reports, is hiring over one. 1,000 human workers to sell its new AI product. Interesting, right? So Salesforce, according to Salesforce, according to Bloomberg is planning to hire more than 1,000 employees to support the launch
Starting point is 00:06:23 of its new AI agent product agent force. So Salesforce CEO Mark Benoff highlighted that agent force, which became available only two weeks ago, is already receiving incredible. feedback from users. So agent force is designed to automate tasks such as customer support and sales development without the need for human intervention, marking a strategic shift in Salesforce's AI strategy. Right. Yeah, isn't that a little wild, right? Like Salesforce has always been about humans selling things.
Starting point is 00:06:56 And now they have an AI agent force product that is, you know, kind of AI taking over sales jobs, but they're hiring a thousand humans to. sell it. So I don't know, call me crazy. I think this would have been a great use case for Salesforce to use agent force to sell agent force, right? So I don't know. It seems like at least to me, let me know if this seems a little backwards to you. I mean, first of all, great. In the age of, you know, AI first and, you know, everyone's worried about, you know, AI taking jobs and it will take a ton of jobs. So I guess kudos to Salesforce for planning to hire a thousand more people, but for how long, right? If its agent force product is as revolutionary as it claims that it is, it can perform all of these tasks that a human would normally do inside of Salesforce.
Starting point is 00:07:49 But yeah, if it is that revolutionary, why are we hiring a thousand humans to sell it? Shouldn't agent force just sell itself through agent force? Well, I don't know. Maybe, maybe not. So Salesforce has been focused on controlling sales expenses. in recent years, which has included job cuts and encouraging customers to explore self-service options. So, yeah, a lot going on in the AI agent space. We had a couple of shows in the last two weeks on this.
Starting point is 00:08:23 So other tech giants, including ServiceNow, Anthropic, Microsoft are also developing similar autonomous agents, intensifying competition in that AI space. So Benoff has openly criticized Microsoft's AI efforts, particularly its co-pilot product, suggesting that Salesforce aims to differentiate itself through superior offerings. And let me just put this out there. I see what he's doing. I see what the CEO, Mark Ben-off, is doing by criticizing co-pilot. But I don't think most people are going to fall for this ploy.
Starting point is 00:09:07 If I'm being honest, I think what he's doing is smart. I would be doing the exact same thing, right? If you want to compete with the best, you try to pick a fight with the leader in the space. And I do think at least in early AI autonomous agents, it is going to be Microsoft who is winning. They have their co-pilot studio with autonomous AI agents rolling out this fall. I'm sure we'll see some announcements at the Ignite conference here in Chicago from Microsoft next week. So it makes sense that Benoff is kind of, you know, pitting Salesforce against Microsoft. It makes perfect sense.
Starting point is 00:09:49 But I think he's just doing it really just to draw attention to agent force. And I don't think it's, you know, I don't think necessarily one is better than the other. I think they obviously serve two very different purposes. All right. Excuse me while I take a sip of water and, you know, might be coughing here. All right, fantastic. We're back. All right. So our next piece of AI news, a big win for Open AI in court as a court dismissed a copyright lawsuit against Open AI. So the Southern District of New York has dismissed a lawsuit filed by Raw Story Media Incorporated in Alternet Media, Inc. against Open AI. So this ruling is noteworthy as it addresses the legality of using scraped content from the web for training AI models. So the lawsuit claimed that OpenAI violated Section 1202B of the DMCA, which is the DIN alternet without preserving copyright management information or CMI. But the judge dismissed the case stated that the plaintiffs failed to demonstrate concrete harm caused by OpenAI's action, which is a crucial requirement for standing in a lawsuit. So the judge highlighted that generative AI models like ChatGBTGPT just synthesized information rather than reproduce it verbatim, making claims of direct infringement just speculative.
Starting point is 00:11:31 So this dismissal aligns with other cases where courts have struggled to apply traditional. copyright laws to generative AI technologies emphasize the challenges of proving copyright violations in this evolving landscape. So the ruling suggests that without clear evidence of harm or exact reproduction of copyrighted works, that plaintiffs may face difficulties in pursuing similar claims in the future. As courts navigate these complex issues, content creators may need to consider licensing agreements, to protect their work and ensure proper compensation for use in AI training data sets. Yeah, here's, let me just cut this one very straight. Large language models scrape copyrighted information from the internet, period point blank, right?
Starting point is 00:12:22 Don't have time to even explain into great detail, but a good majority of the information that gets into large language models is scraped content from the web that is copyrighted. But so far, there hasn't really been a marquee lawsuit going against these big AI companies for copyright in Fringman. And I personally don't see that happening anytime soon, at least not for a text-based model. When we get into images, I think we might see that just because you're literally seeing it sometimes spit out direct replicas,
Starting point is 00:12:58 you know, artists, signatures, things like that. But I don't see it happening right now for text-to-text large language models. All right. Our next piece of AI news, Trump's return to the White House could reshape AI policy. So as Donald Trump prepares for his potential return to the presidency after winning the 2024 presidential election, the landscape of AI is really changing and open the balance on what's going to happen with a new administration in charge. So Trump's first major action on a. is expected to be the repeal of President Biden's executive order on AI, which aimed to address civil rights in national security threats while promoting innovation.
Starting point is 00:13:48 Trump's views on AIs have shifted between admiration and concern, particularly regarding competition with China, which he identifies as a major threat for the race for advanced AI development. Also, there's a division within Trump's own circle. So this is according to reports from time in a lot of other organizations. Kind of, you know, as an example, Elon Musk may be taking a visible position in Elon, or sorry, in President Trump's cabinet. And he's expressing existential concerns about AI, while others like Trump's VP, JD Vance are advocates for fewer regulations and open models.
Starting point is 00:14:33 So, yeah, it should be interesting to see. how this pans out. The other thing, which we talked about last week, the future of the USAI Safety Institute, which was established under Biden to lead AI safety efforts, the future of that department remains uncertain with some Republicans viewing it as an obstacle to innovation, and their funding is running out. So that kind of, the U.S. has been a little different. So we had the Biden executive order. We had the USAI Safety Institute, but we don't technically, have any real federal laws or aside from the U.S. AI Safety Institute, we don't have a federal governing body. Right. So it is really a tumultuous time right now for people in the AI and
Starting point is 00:15:19 tech industries on what's going to happen now in January with Trump as the president again and what some of his new policies may entail. So as an example, there's going to be reportedly an increased tariff on imports, which is a central part of Trump's campaign, but that could inadvertently raise costs for AI-related hardware impacting just about every single big tech company and every single company in Silicon Valley. So a lot of reports are saying, hey, your next laptop or smartphone could cost a lot more. So as an example, the Consumer Technology Association warns that prices could skyrocket. Laptop. tops could nearly double in price.
Starting point is 00:16:05 Game councils could go up 40% and smartphones could go up by 26%. So these tariffs on imports could really affect those in the AI industry as well, reportedly anywhere from 10 to 20% tariffs or up to 60% tariffs for goods coming in from China specifically. So that should be very interesting to see how this impacts huge companies, such as invidia, Microsoft, Alphabet, especially those who have hardware partnerships coming in from overseas. Because what that kind of what's that, what's being reported is that cost for AI will have to go up because the hardware costs associated with producing these state of the art AI models are going to go up. And that cost has to get passed on to someone. So it should be
Starting point is 00:17:01 pretty interesting to see how this pans out. Also with people like Elon Musk, potentially having a huge say for AI policy could be interesting because as polarizing as Elon Musk is, he has his own interest, right? He has his GROC AI model. So, you know, we'll see what actually happens here, but we'll obviously be covering it in the coming months. So Trump may all. also seek to address what he perceives as political biases in AI algorithms, potentially leading to executive orders that could alter how tech companies operate and develop their AI systems. So like I said, the influence of prominent tech figures, including Elon Musk and others, will play a critical role in shaping Trump's AI policies,
Starting point is 00:17:53 highlighting a shift in Silicon Valley's approach to collaboration with the government on national security issues. All right. Our next piece of AI news that matters. Microsoft is adjusting co-pilot pro. Like, are they getting rid of it? Well, maybe, kind of, at least for certain countries. So Microsoft has announced that it will start including copilot pro features in its Microsoft 365 personal and family subscriptions in some countries, a move that comes after feedback from users regarding the previous $20 a month charge for these AI. powered tools. So right now, this change currently applies to subscribers in Australia, where I just was, New Zealand, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, so a lot of countries there, suggesting a trial phase before potential broader implementation. So here's how it could work.
Starting point is 00:18:51 So subscribers will receive a monthly allocation of AI credits to use copilot in various other applications, including Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook, OneNote, and the new Microsoft Designer app. But it doesn't mean you get it for free. So the price of Microsoft 365 personal and family subscriptions will reportedly increase with specific hikes, such as, as an example, for Australian dollars for family subscriptions, or five Australian dollars per month for personal subscriptions, so effective upon the next renewal date. So this price adjustment is part of Microsoft strategy to reflect the added value over the past decade and to fund future innovations. The company's previous attempts to charge an additional $20 per month for Copilot Pro was met with a little bit of skepticism indicating that this is.
Starting point is 00:19:53 Adobe just introduced an entirely new way to create, bringing the power and precision of its creative suite into one conversational experience. Meet Firefly AI Assistant, now live in the Adobe Firefly app, the all-in-one creative AI studio. Powered by Adobe's creative agent, Firefly AI Assistant lets you start with your vision, just describe what you want, and shape the outcome as it takes form with the Assistant. The Assistant orchestrates multi-step workflows, drawing on 60-plus pro-grade tools across Adobe Creative Cloud apps, including Photoshop, Illustrator, Premier, Lightroom Express, and more to help bring your ideas to life. You can also get started with creative skills, a growing library of pre-built workflows for common creative tasks like batch editing photos, creating mood boards, portrait retouching, and creating
Starting point is 00:20:43 social variations. Every step the assistant takes is visible so you can refine, redirect, or take over at any time. You stay in the driver's seat as the creative director. Adobe Firefly AI assistant now in public beta. See it today at firefly.adopi.com. approach may be more palatable for consumers. So we'll extend to the U.S. or European markets, indicating that this selective rollout may be a precursor to wider adjustments. So yeah, I'm guessing we will see at the Microsoft conference November 19th in Chicago. Like I said, let me know if you're going to be there at the Microsoft Ignite conference
Starting point is 00:21:31 in my hometown of Chicago. So I'm sure we'll be hearing a little bit more on Microsoft's future plan for co-pilot pro. And is that still going to be a thing? I think it's been great for Mac users such as myself, although I'm in the middle of probably switching over to a PC. I'll probably be buying one within a week or so once I get back to the U.S. in like 36 hours. I think it's actually been a pretty good product, right?
Starting point is 00:22:03 $20 a month? unlimited, right? Yes, you still have to have your Microsoft subscription to use those Microsoft products on Mac. So I think this really is going to be impacting those that aren't, you know, using Microsoft 365 at your work. But most people, I'll see the overwhelming majority of people are already using Microsoft 365 Pro. And if you are, then you are probably using Microsoft 365 copilot as well. So this maybe may not be impacting a huge percentage. of users. However, for some people like myself, right, I currently pay $20 a month for copilot pro as well as my, you know, Microsoft subscription. So yeah, it is going to be impacting
Starting point is 00:22:47 a lot of people. But yeah, I'm curious. Do you guys out there, do you use the free version of Microsoft co-pilot? Do you use the Microsoft copilot pro or are you using that Microsoft 365 copilot? All right. Our next piece of AI news. Google accidentally leaked its Jarvis AI, an upcoming web browsing agent. So Google has recently kind of leaked details about its upcoming AI agent called Jarvis AI, which is designed to assist users by browsing the web on their behalf in Chrome. So we talked about this on the show last week, but an internal preview of Jarvis AI was posted on the Chrome extension store, but was quickly removed, indicating that Google may have accidentally
Starting point is 00:23:39 released it a little too early and maybe in the final stages of development. So the prototype was described as a helpful companion that serves the web with you, suggesting a focus on enhancing user experience during online activities like shopping and travel planning. So users who managed to download the prototype in time while it was still up on the Chrome Web Store found it unusable due to specific access permission requirements, hinting at the complexity of the AI's functionality. The official unveiling of Jarvis AI is expected in December, according to reports from the information, which adds to the anticipation surrounding this tool. So, yeah, we'll actually see if it even keeps the name Jarvis AI. As we talked about before,
Starting point is 00:24:25 there was another pretty popular GPT writing product called Jarvis for a couple of years. They reportedly got hit with a little lawsuit from Disney and Marvel and then had to change their name to Jasper. So we'll see if Google still calls it Jarvis AI or something else. But Jarvis AI through the Chrome Extension aims to automate web browsing tasks, allowing users to focus on more important matters such as holiday shopping by handling the mundane tasks such as purchasing gifts. So this development follows a trend in AI where companies like Anthropic are releasing similar products, indicating a growing market for AI agents capable of performing tasks autonomously. Yeah. And if you are interested in the Anthropics version of this, it's called computer use.
Starting point is 00:25:12 We did a dedicated show about two weeks ago walking you through step by step exactly how to use this computer use from Anthropic. It was extremely buggy, but I do think it shows some promise. Speaking of agents, Microsoft, not just co-pilot Studio. They released another new multi, a new multi agent AI system for enterprises called Magentic One. So Microsoft has introduced Magentic One, a multi-agent AI system. system designed to automate complex tasks that typically require human intervention. So Magentic One is built on Microsoft's open source auto gen framework and aims to handle open-ended
Starting point is 00:26:09 web and file-based tasks with future plans for more complex reasoning tasks. So right now, it is an open source multi-agent AI system designed to coordinate multiple AI agents to complete complex tasks. So developers and researchers can access it right now on. GitHub under a custom Microsoft license. So yeah, this isn't something for the everyday person. You do have to be a little bit more technical. You have to know your way around a GitHub repo.
Starting point is 00:26:37 And, you know, kind of, yeah, you got to be a little bit of a dork to use this one. But let's talk a little bit more about it. So the system features an orchestrator agent that directs four specialized agents. So web surfer, file surfer, coder, and computer terminal to officially complete assigned tasks. So each of these four sub-agents has distinct functions. So for example, Web Surfer, like you can guess, it manages tasks in web browsers, while Coder specializes in, you guess it, writing and executing code. So currently, Magentic One uses GPD40 from Open AI as its underlying large language model, but can be integrated with other models that possess strong reasoning capabilities. So the company
Starting point is 00:27:21 advises users to take precautions when deploying the system, including isolating agents in containers in limiting their internet access to mitigate risk. Yeah, it's like, hey, these things can be powerful. Go put them in a sandbox by themselves. Don't let them play with other kids or don't let them play with live important data that is connected to other parts of your company. Also, Microsoft said a human supervisor is recommended to oversee the agents, particularly when handling sensitive data. So I have not yet had a chance to play with Magetic One. And hey, let me know. Audience, live stream audience. Some of these things are pretty technical. So let me know if you do want to see something like this. All right. There we go. Our last AI news story.
Starting point is 00:28:27 Open AI is reportedly facing some challenges with slowing AI improvements. So a recent report from the information indicates that OpenAI's next flagship model is codenamed Orion and it may not showcase the same level of advancements as previous iterations, raising concerns about the future of AI development. So according to reports from the information, employees testing the over Ryan model noted that while it outperforms existing models, the improvements are less significant compared to the leap from GPT3 to GPT4. So if you haven't been following along, this Orion model is the next model. This is the co-name for the next model in the GPT series. So as a reminder,
Starting point is 00:29:22 the reasoning model, it is not in the GPT series. Open AI says. that that is its own. So the O-1 model. So right now we have access to O-1 preview and O-1 mini. It is a reasoning model. So that was previously co-named Q-Star, then Strawberry, and was released as O'1 preview in O'1 Mini. So with Orion, it is not a reasoning model, at least not that we know of. It is a GPT-T-Model. So GPD-3, GPD4, and presumably O'Rion will be either GBT 4 or GPD 5 or GPT5. So specifically some open AI employees who tested the new model called Orion say it performs at a similar level to GVD4 after only 20% of its training, which I would say is actually
Starting point is 00:30:11 pretty impressive, right? But you read the headline and all the news, it's saying, oh, this AI improvement has slowed down according to this. I don't know. I don't see it. But let's continue talking about it. So, however, the improvements they said, employees that tested this, we're speaking anonymously to the information, they said the improvement isn't as big
Starting point is 00:30:36 as the jump was from GPT3 to GPT4, which suggests that making models better by simply adding more data might be getting harder now that there's less high quality data available. So in some areas, including coding, Orion may not consider. consistently outperform prior models suggesting a slowdown in the rate of AI enhancements. So to address these challenges, OpenAI has established a foundation's team tasked with developing new strategies to sustain model improvements despite a decreasing availability of fresh training data. So reportedly, these strategies may involve training Orion using synthetic data generated by AI models such as 01, right?
Starting point is 00:31:23 These reasoning models, they said that. They said that they are going to use the O1 or the O series of models to create new synthetic training data for the GPT models. So OpenAI has not confirmed any of this or they've not confirmed plans to release, you know, a GPT5 or Orion in 2025, responding to inquiries with a statement indicating no immediate rollout. What important thing to note about this article is it did quote, Noam Brown, a researcher at OpenAI. So he was apparently quoted in the article from a TED talk that he gave.
Starting point is 00:32:05 However, on Twitter, someone did ask him about this and he kind of deflected the overall sentiment of this article, which I found interesting, saying, quote, in the TED AI talk that I gave, which they, the information, selectively quoted in the article, I make the case that there won't be a slowdown in AI progress any time soon. So pretty interesting there. Even one of the people quoted in this article by name was quoted from a TED talk. And then the researcher himself responded and said, hey, actually, it seems like they just pulled a quote that didn't tell the whole story because actually, in that talk, he specifically said that there would not be any slowdown in the AI space.
Starting point is 00:32:56 My hot take, absolutely not. Absolutely not. I do think that the improvements from a GPD4 to a GPD5 will actually be smaller. If you just look at the model quality, just because, yeah, it's data. You do need a model that can reason because, you know, you can only get so far, with essential, right, like large language models are essentially just advanced next token prediction, right? Like times a million, it's much more complicated than that. But if the quality of the training data doesn't drastically improve to get better outputs from said GPT models,
Starting point is 00:33:39 you have to start introducing either synthetic data from a reasoning model like 01, which kind of uses this under the hood chain of thought reasoning. reasoning like a human would, right? So instead of, you know, having to prompt engineer a GPT model or a Gemini model or a Claude model, right, the O1 model kind of does that by itself, right? It does kind of the work that a human would normally do to get superior and better outputs from a GBT model. So I do think that they, to see a sizable leap from a GPD4 to a GPD 5 or a GPD 4.5, yeah, you're going to have to either use synthetic data because there's not enough high quality new data that's being created on a yearly basis. There's not.
Starting point is 00:34:27 I think it's actually the opposite problem. I think so many people are starting to use AI and they don't know how and they're doing it in a lazy way. So much of the new information that is being posted online is a lot of AI data. And it's a lot of stuff that's probably actually from GPT 3.5. So you almost have this, this regurgitation of all. older low quality data. So I do think that model makers are going to have to start using synthetic data.
Starting point is 00:34:58 And they're going to have to start including some reasoning capabilities by default. Right. I do think to see a sizable leap in GPT5 in Orion, whatever it's going to be called, you're going to have to borrow or use at least some of that secret sauce of 01 in the reasoning and the chain of thought thinking underneath to really give. get superior outputs. All right. That was a lot, y'all.
Starting point is 00:35:24 You can tell I haven't done this. You know, I've only done this now twice in the past 10 days. So it's been, it's been great to take some, a little bit of time off. But yeah, my voice, I'm already losing it now after 33 minutes. And y'all know I, I usually do this every single day for like 40 minutes. But let's do a quick recap of the AI news that matters. So first, open an A. I came out that they have a lot of huge partnerships with the U.S. federal government,
Starting point is 00:35:57 agencies like NASA and the IRS subscribers going to hire a thousand human workers for its new AI product agent force. A court has dismissed a copyright lawsuit against open AI. Trump's return to the White House is causing a lot of uncertainty around a AI development and what's going to happen with all of these companies when there's maybe new tariffs. There's maybe, you know, the executive order might be gone. So yeah, we'll see what happens there. Microsoft is apparently kind of starting to phase out co-pilot pro, at least in some countries. We'll see if that's rolled out worldwide.
Starting point is 00:36:40 Google kind of accidentally leaked Jarvis AI. It's upcoming web browsing assistant. Speaking of that, Microsoft launched Magentic One. a new multi-agent AI system for enterprises. And last but not least, according to the information, Open AI is facing some challenges in its AI improvement rates going from model to model. All right. I hope this was helpful, y'all.
Starting point is 00:37:06 A lot of work goes into this every single week, even when I'm on vacation and enjoying an anniversary with my wife, spent a lot of time. So if this was helpful, please let someone else know about it. Don't be a jerk. Go click. If you're listening to this on LinkedIn, in please repost this.
Starting point is 00:37:20 If you're on Twitter, retweet it or re-exit, whatever it's called. Maybe if you're on the podcast, send this to someone, email this to someone, text it to someone. I know this might be your little secret on how you're the smartest person in AI at your company, but so much work goes into this. So if you could, please repost this, share this. If you're listening on the podcast, if you haven't already, please click that, subscribe or follow button on the podcast player of your choice, whether you're listening on Spotify or Apple. please leave us a rating and please join us back tomorrow and every day for more everyday AI thanks
Starting point is 00:37:54 y'all meet firefly AI assistant now live in adobe firefly the allman one creative AI studio just describe what you want to create in your own words and the assistant handles the rest orchestrating multi-step workflows across adobe creative cloud apps including Photoshop premiere express and more in one conversational interface you direct the outcome while the assistant accelerates execution stand control with the ability to step in and refine at any time. See it today at firefly.adobie.com. And that's a wrap for today's edition of Everyday AI. Thanks for joining us. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave us a rating. It helps keep us going. For a little more AI magic, visit Your EverydayaI.com and
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