Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast - Everyday AI - Ask Us Anything Edition

Episode Date: May 22, 2023

On today's episode of Everyday AI, we let you ask us anything! From the socioeconomic impacts of AI to plagiarism detection for AI-generated content, we answer all the questions. We also discuss... today's latest AI news including G7 meeting to talk about AI's impact and bringing loved ones back from the dead using AI. If you have any questions you'd like to ask us, feel free to join us every weekday at 7:30 AM CST on LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube, Facebook, and Twitch!Time Stamps:[00:01:01] AI Regulation Discussed at G7 Summit[00:05:28] US Slow to Regulate AI as US Tech Stocks Surge[00:09:40] Google's New Text to Speech and Audio[00:14:33] Challenges of Addressing Biases in AI Algorithms[00:18:23] How Will AI Impact Employment and Inequality?[00:24:05] China Using AI to Bring Loved Ones Back From the Dead[00:27:15] Human Rights in AIFor full show notes, head to YourEverydayAI.com Topics covered in the podcast episode include:- Concerns about human rights implications of cloning people's voices and generating digital avatars- Benefits of using voice cloning technology to remember loved ones and for those who never had a chance to record their loved ones' voices while they were still alive- Tools available for checking plagiarism in exact copies of texts- US dragging its feet on AI regulation due to AI and tech stocks contributing significantly to the stock market growth- Mitigating negative consequences of AI use in the entertainment industry, including writer's strike in Hollywood and the need for standards for AI use in productions- Sounding platform by Google that allows text to speech, text to audio, and text to music- Use of AI in certain industries to write scripts, storyboards, and other creative work leading to layoffs- Two sides of technology, including the potential positives and negatives of AI- Keeping up to date with AI developments and practical next steps- G7 world leaders meeting to discuss AI regulation and making it more trustworthy- Addressing biases in AI algorithms for fair and unbiased outcomes in various domainsAdditionally, the podcast episode features a live Ask Us Anything session, where the speakers answer questions about the socioeconomic impacts of AI on employment, income distribution, and economic inequality and discuss biases in AI training models.Keywords:human rights, AI, cloning, voice generation, digital avatars, bad actors, stuffed animals, voice recording, plagiarism, Chat GPT, AI regulation, tech stocks, Google, Soundstorm, text to speech, text to audio, text to music, creative work, layoffs, socioeconomic impacts, income distribution, economic inequality, interview, biases, algorithms, banking industry, loan approvals, hiring, Lex Friedman, CEO, OpenAI, models training.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. Will the rest of the world force the United States to slow down AI development?
Starting point is 00:00:53 I'm not sure. That's one of the things that we're going to be talking about today on everyday AI. This is your daily podcast, live stream, and newsletter bringing you the latest news, tools, trends, and everything AI. So everyday people like you and me can keep up with it. and actually use what's going on to help us in our lives and careers. Not as always, but as often we have our guest host, Brandon. Brandon, what's going on? How you doing?
Starting point is 00:01:23 I'm doing well. How you doing? Hopefully everyone's having a good day and hopefully you have as nice as weather as we're having in Chicago today. Oh, the Chicago weather, it's like you have to really fight through the winters. And I think you get rewarded. You get rewarded with like four months of just absolute beautiful weather. So we got that this weekend. So if you are joining us live, please leave us a comment.
Starting point is 00:01:48 Kind of build this episode as Ask Us Anything. So we haven't had one of these in a while. So I want to make sure that if you are tuning in live, you can get answers to your questions. Brandon and I and a couple others on our team are spending a lot of time every single month to keep up with all these newest developments and what's going on in the world of AI. And we want to help you. So this is ultimately what this is about. So if you have any questions, comments about anything going on, please leave us, leave us a comment.
Starting point is 00:02:19 So let's get going. So we're going to run down some of the newest developments in AI news and just what's going on. So kind of what we led the show with today, Brandon, this should be interesting to see. So G7, so that's just kind of the world leaders from some of the biggest countries, you know, United States, Canada, other European Union. So they met in Hiroshima, Japan, Friday and over the weekend. And one of the biggest things that they were talking about was AI. And, you know, I think the rest of the world, whether it's for better or worse, is pushing for AI regulation a little harder than we are in the U.S.
Starting point is 00:03:03 And a little bit more on that later, why maybe I think that's happening. But one of the biggest things that they talked about at this kind of G7 summit, Hiroshima is, you know, making AI more trustworthy and talking about are there, you know, regulations that kind of G7 world leaders can agree to. You know, Brandon, what do you think this means, if anything? Yeah, I mean, I think this is important. I think this is definitely a big step for not only, you know, the United States, but the rest of the world.
Starting point is 00:03:33 Because if we can kind of maybe create some sort of general standards, even though, you know, each country is going to adopt their own thing, hopefully it helps us to just kind of get further along. You know, I know, like, as we're pushing out news and whatnot in our newsletters, we've put a couple of stories out about, you know, China as an example, putting regulations already in place for AI. So there's other countries that are already ahead of the game. And I feel like the U.S. is kind of in this spot of, like, waiting game.
Starting point is 00:04:00 Yeah, exactly. PJ, thank you for your comment. So PJ's asking what tools are available to check that your AI generated content is accepted by Google and not plagiarism. So many people are asking about that. Brandon, we actually did. I won't say it's a fun study because it was actually extremely time consuming. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:04:23 And probably a little frustrating. So PJ, I'll come with a hot take. It doesn't exist. Because there's no way to consistently tell if AI, if content is AI generated. So there's three or four. you know, kind of big name companies that say they offer the service to detect if your content is generated by AI. So by chat GPT or by, you know, Jasper copy AI. So all of these different platforms. And a lot of these platforms also as a quote unquote feature or benefit say, hey, you know, this isn't,
Starting point is 00:05:02 you know, it won't be plagiarized. So there's two different things, right? So plagiarism is obviously when you're lifting content verbatim that already exists on the internet, right? So there's two different steps. So are there tools that can help make sure that your AI content is not plagiarized? 100%. And that's accurate. But, you know, where the line starts to blend is, you know, now they're saying, hey, there's AI content detectors.
Starting point is 00:05:30 And Brandon, I'd say at least with our testing, not a chance. Yeah, I mean, there are, you know, they, do work, but they're not consistent. So, you know, there are, there are a few that can, like, let you know if it feels that the content is written by AI. But from our testing, and maybe that's something that we can talk about, you know, in the future, you know, put out some of those examples. I do think that there's not one that's going to exactly give you the right answer all the time. Yeah. So PJs, yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:00 Yeah, that's a great question. So for plagiarism alone, yes, there are those tools. And those, those work very well. because obviously they're checking against exact copies of what, you know, whatever system may be producing to see if that already exists. So on the plagiarism side, I think it's fairly accurate. So either have to use a service. So I don't believe chat GPT has this built in.
Starting point is 00:06:25 I'd have to check the plug-in section because new plugins are being released at all times. But I don't think chat GPT has this built in. Other services do. But fantastic question. So getting back to, sorry about that. So getting back to, you know, some of these other things that are going on. So we talked about, you know, the rest of the world, you know, kind of pushing for regulation in the U.S. not really being on the forefront. So obviously we talked on the show last week, you know, Open AI CEO Sam Altman testified before Congress.
Starting point is 00:07:00 I think at least in the United States, I don't see any major regulation happening soon. Emphasis on major. And here's one of the reasons why there was a report that just came out this morning, actually, from Reuters just looking at the stock market. And, you know, the S&P 500, you know, one of the major indexes in the U.S., you know, showed just up about 10% this year. So 9% specifically. So but what they looked at is if you take away the AI and tech stocks, the S&P 500 is down 1%. So if you want to know, at least in my kind of hot take opinion, why is the U.S.
Starting point is 00:07:44 you know, seemingly dragging its feet on AI regulation? It's like, there's the answer. At least that's what I think, Brandon. Yeah, no. I mean, it does make sense. And I don't know. I could see like this background fear maybe forming of like, you know, you know, well, all I say, I'm going to dictate basically everything for the U.S.,
Starting point is 00:08:07 which is probably what's going to happen. And so I feel like if you don't have a good handle on how you're going to regulate it, how it's going to come into play for various reasons, I can see why you'd be hesitant, especially with the power that it's already driving for multiple industries in terms of like funding, just like it's the number one. thing that everybody wants to kind of get into. So it makes sense. Yeah. And, you know, obviously the, you know, certain, you know, the S&P and NASDAQ, I think, are doing a little bit better than, you know,
Starting point is 00:08:41 the Dow Jones as, as an example. But you take away those tech stocks, you know, AI companies or companies investing heavily in AI. So if the U.S. government were to come in and just regulate hard, the economic factors that that would have on the U.S. are, you know, they would be mind blowing. You know, it's look at all of the biggest companies that are helping fuel, you know, this, this positive growth for the United States. So, you know, your Microsoft, your, you know, Alphabet slash Google, your meta slash Facebook, you know, IBM, Nvidia, you know, these biggest companies that are, you know, up 30, 50% over the year and driving this growth.
Starting point is 00:09:25 If you come down too hard on AI regulation, it will really start to cut off this growth at the needs. Yeah, Brandon, what do you think? Yeah, I mean, I agree. I mean, that's every major company is getting in the game right now. And so that, that's, it's like, it's like taking away the future of these companies, basically. And so I think that would be interesting because like what, I mean, If you take away I, like what else are we working on in terms of future like tech advancements?
Starting point is 00:09:59 Like I don't know. Like I'm sure there's something out there, but this is really the wave right now. Yeah. So speaking of tech advancements, let's go to our next, kind of our next story. So this is also pretty new. I actually had to search quite a bit to find this. So Google released a new kind of text to audio or text to music and text to speak. speech platform just this morning called Soundstorm.
Starting point is 00:10:28 So we've talked about it on the show before and we linked it in the daily newsletter. So if you haven't subscribed to that yet, go to your everyday AI.com, sign up for the daily newsletter. So Google before had announced MusicLM, which allows that that was strictly a text to music. And you can type in a little prompt and get a, you know, 15, 20 second kind of like little music piece out of it. So they announced Soundstorm, and it's going to be faster. It's going to allow you, again, text to speech, text to audio, text to music.
Starting point is 00:11:04 It's going to allow you to generate a little more. But I think the interesting thing here, Brandon, as I play a sample or I try to play a sample is dialogue. So, all right, I'm going to, we're going to try this. I haven't presented audio live yet on everyday AI. So hopefully this works. We're going to give this a test here. So I'm going to hit the play button. Hopefully you hear, but what you should hear is some dialogue.
Starting point is 00:11:30 And let's take a listen. It's 20 seconds. 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, Premiere, Lightroom Express, and more
Starting point is 00:12:15 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 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.
Starting point is 00:12:43 See it today at firefly.adobie.com. Did you hear about Google's paper on Soundstorm? No, I must have missed it. What's it about? Well, it's a parallel decoder for efficient audio generation. It can even be used to generate. dialogues. Oh, interesting. Yeah, yeah. Like, this one was generated by Soundstorm. Wait, what? Brandon, what are your thoughts? That's good. That's good. I know on one hand, someone's listening to
Starting point is 00:13:24 it's going like, ah, this is scary, but like to me, I think that's pretty cool, actually. Just the cadence, like the pauses, the like general reactions that they created. It sounds very, uh, Very natural. It doesn't sound like any AI generation was going on there. You know, the pauses were normal. Yeah, that was good. Yeah, I mean, I think emotion, like, the way that you'll be able to start to capture emotion in, like, Texas dialogue is going to be interesting. Just because that's one of the last pieces missing just to make it sound more natural.
Starting point is 00:13:59 So that, that was really good. Yeah, I think that's, that's crazy. wild like when i when i listen to that this morning so i didn't fully read uh so let me let me actually just share uh share my screen again here so i didn't fully read uh this part right here i just saw the big play button and i hit play right so i didn't even know until the end of that that that was actually AI generated right i i kind of thought like oh maybe this is but I didn't read the full thing. And then when they said, oh, this was produced by Soundstorm, I was like, whoa.
Starting point is 00:14:40 Yeah. Yeah, that's really good. I know we've personally used other services in the past. And this one's definitely has to be the best so far. So this is definitely going to be kind of like an industry breakthrough for, you know, tax of dialogue. Man, one thing. So, yeah, one of the big companies in that space is called 11 labs.
Starting point is 00:15:02 They're probably, you know, one of the top. you know, two or three at least, maybe number one. But Brandon, like something we haven't even talked about, maybe we save it for another episode. So when the big companies, the, you know, the, the meta, the Google, Microsoft, when they start developing these other models, right, like text of speech or, you know, video, right? So runway, the company, runway.m.L. has been running away in the text of video sector. So all these different, you know, generative AI companies that started small and they grew so big like what happens now when google you know releases its text to video or what happens now that we have sound storm and we have this text to speech um i don't know
Starting point is 00:15:48 what do you think yeah i don't know i mean as much as we've been talking about all google's kind of hesitant sitting in the background i could easily see them you know maybe they're doing it for a reason and i'm not i would not be surprised if when they come out with their own services they just blow everything out of the water. And so everything that we thought was like this, you know, new gold standard is just like now kind of thrown to the back. So it'll be interesting to see if they produce the same kind of quality as that text to speech or text to dialogue.
Starting point is 00:16:16 That'll be interesting. Yeah. Sayetta, so we have a comment. First, thank you. I know you're always, you know, interacting with us on LinkedIn, Saeda. So thank you for that. So she has a question. How can we identify and address biases in AI algorithms?
Starting point is 00:16:32 algorithms to ensure fair and unbiased outcomes across various domains, such as hiring, criminal justice, and loan approvals. Wow. That's that's a that that's a that's a huge one. Um, where do we even begin on that one? So I'll say this. So even background. Um, so people who aren't following AI development as closely as, as, um, the rest of us. So AI is nothing new, right? It's been around for actually, you know, we talked about this brain. It's been around for technically like 60 years. But AI has been used in commercial development, you know, different sectors pretty consistently since the 80s. So, Saida, to get to the second half, you know, loan approvals, I know that the, you know, the banking industry has been heavily using AI and deep learning for decades.
Starting point is 00:17:25 So they are already using that in loan approval processes. criminal justice, I'm not sure. That will be interesting to take a look at. Maybe we'll have to do a little research on that. Hiring is another fantastic one. And I think out of the three that you kind of asked about here hiring criminal justice and loan approvals, I'd say a lot of the current or more recent trends in AI are being applied more in hiring, in HR, in talent acquisition. But the biases are extremely important. So I've, we've mentioned this on the show once or twice before. I think it's worth a listen.
Starting point is 00:18:07 Lex Friedman had a super, not super long because his podcasts are kind of long, but about a two and a half hour talk with Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI. And they talked a lot about biases and how they train models. So I'd love to pretend I'm an expert or that we're an expert in AI algorithms and biases, but we're not. I think that's a good place to start is to hear, you know, the CEO of probably one of the biggest companies in the AI space talk about biases because it's, it's real. You know, Brandon, what do you think? And, you know, I know we don't have the answers necessarily, but, you know, what do you see with, with bias playing into all this and what can you do about it?
Starting point is 00:18:51 Something that you just made me think about is, you know, right now it seems that we're basing a lot of these tools that we are creating with like let's just say you know three language uh models uh well so you know for example you have the big players you have open a i you have barred um you know you have the uh the bing chat and so i'm wondering you know let's just say right now those get published as like you know what their biases are or like how they work we kind of know what to expect uh you know depending on what's released but then you know what happens down the line line if, you know, do we get so advanced to where every company is just able to create their own, like, language model at a certain point? Or is that part of maybe what the U.S. needs to
Starting point is 00:19:36 figure out is like, okay, we're only going to base it off of like these four major companies. And by doing so, to get back to the question, you know, maybe we're able to understand what biases or what's in place to understand how these are working for being used for hiring process, for loan approvals, criminal justice. If we get to a point where we're using, AI for those things. So it'll be interesting to see, like, you know, are we just talking about those major companies or is everyone going to have their own kind of customize AI in the future? Yeah, for sure. And just a reminder, if you are tuning in live, this is kind of the Ask Us Anything session of everyday AI. So if you are listening on the podcast, make sure to, you know,
Starting point is 00:20:22 check out the live stream once. So taking your questions and Syed, another fantastic question. Wow, for Monday morning, you're making us work for it, but I love it. So Sayetta has another question. So what are the potential socioeconomic impacts of AI on employment, income distribution, and economic inequality, and how can we mitigate any negative consequences? Wow. Another fantastic question. And again, I will reference that same interview, but I'll take something out that Sam Altman actually said. And I'm not saying this is one of the reasons why we really started everyday AI,
Starting point is 00:21:04 but it definitely played into it. So, you know, when I first listened to that interview, one little nugget that people, I don't think, picked up on in that two and a half hour interview is Sam Altman said, you know, there will be economic shock. And I think that specifically, he was probably referencing the U.S., But I do think that there will be some of this going on throughout the world. But even real quickly with my background, I've spent thousands of hours creating content, you know, doing photo, you know, photo editing, video, audio. So, you know, I've been doing, you know, some sort of this, this marketing and communications professionally for 20 years.
Starting point is 00:21:50 And AI is better than all of me at all of it, right? So what does that mean on employment? Sayeta, I always say follow the money. So these same companies in the U.S. that are driving our economic growth, what's happening? They're laying off thousands of people. Okay. Number one. Number two, they're investing tens of billions with a B.
Starting point is 00:22:14 These same companies driving our economic growth and investing tens of billions of dollars into AI and also laying off thousands of employees. So what does that tell you? I think there is going to be some kind of economic shock. What that means, I'm not sure. I don't want to be the AI doomsday guy saying AI is going to take every job or every single job. But I do believe, and this isn't just my, you know, my background being able to see all of this, especially generative AI and what it can do.
Starting point is 00:22:54 But I mean, so many companies, big companies now are laying off thousands of people and they are open enough to say this is because of AI. Brandon, I mean, I know there's a lot to unpack there, but what are your thoughts on Citas question? Yeah. I mean, it's again, really great question. Honestly, I don't know how much more I can add in terms of just like what's going on right now to what Jordan mentioned. But I guess just just personal opinion. Yeah, I do think that could. A specific example that's already coming to mind is the writer's strike that's still going on.
Starting point is 00:23:28 And so, you know, you're going to have a lot of these situations like the writer's strike. And again, if no one's familiar right now in Hollywood, there's the writer's strike. The Writers Guild America is basically just striking for various reasons. But one of the reasons being that a lot of these production companies are starting to use AI and they just want to make sure that they have a job secured for the future. So they just want to create kind of standards of when to use AI and how to use it with the writer's work. And so that's just one of the examples of kind of just like people trying to, I guess, mitigate negative consequences, but, you know, we'll see how it turns out.
Starting point is 00:24:03 And so I really think this question is great, but I feel like there's so many kind of variables up in there to kind of know exactly how we'd be able to maybe avoid those negative consequences right now. Yeah. It's definitely going to be. I'd say a roller coaster of emotions for a lot of people, if I'm being honest, because, you know, some sectors and industries are going to be faster because it makes more sense. You know, Brandon's example was a great example, you know, the Writers Guild, you know,
Starting point is 00:24:36 if people are training, you know, large language models to write scripts, you know, to write TV scripts, to write movie scripts, you know, storyboarding is is another big piece that goes into, you know, just that that industry you know the the writer's guild that the strike all of that and there's so many of these tools now that can be leveraged um in those environments you know kind of in the hollywood scene movies tv all of that but i do think other sectors are going to start to get hit um and it's the big companies right like i always say if you want to know what's happening follow the money money's getting poured into ai and those same companies that are pouring money into ai are laying off thousands of people and attributing it to AI.
Starting point is 00:25:19 So yeah, it's going to be interesting. But that's one of the reasons why we started the show because we want everyone listening. We want you to really be able to keep up with everything that's going on and actually use it. You know, the newsletter is such a fantastic resource, right? I do think hopefully the show here or the podcast, you know, will help keep you informed. But the newsletter is actually where, you know, we share those practical next steps to say, hey, you know, we shared about this or we had a guest on about this. Now, if you want to do something about it, here's how. So I know we're a little over. We have one more newspeeps to wrap up.
Starting point is 00:25:57 But if you have any other questions, please drop them. So this last one, Brandon, it's a little weird. But it's like, all right, it's kind of cool, but also very weird. So there's a story in business insider that will link in the newsletter saying, uh, essentially they're saying China's using AI to raise the debt, uh, give, give people, you know, a last shot to say goodbye to their loved one. So there's a lot of, uh, you know, smaller companies out there. Um, in, in China that are specifically, you know, marketing themselves as, hey, we're going to take your loved one. We're going to use all this, you know, a loved one that's passed. And we're going to use all this technology and to help you after the fact kind of bring them back to life so you can have
Starting point is 00:26:43 conversations with them so you can get you know get them to see you know still talk to them so there's different applications you know whether it's text audio um kind of crazy because you know obviously you can do this now and you know replicate your voice with different AI technology but that's if you're training it right like a live person training it Brandon what's what's your initial thoughts on this is like creepy or cool I don't know. I have, I think it's both. I feel like this just comes down to personal preference. I could see a lot of people benefiting from this, you know, just for whatever reason. I know a lot of people that, you know, end up in situations where, you know, they wish they said something or they wish, you know, something went differently. So I think it gives people opportunity for closure. But at the same time, I could see other people being very, like, disturbed by it. So I'm in between. I think it's, it's cool and a little creepy at the same time. Yeah. I don't know how to feel about this one.
Starting point is 00:27:42 And again, this goes into, you know, just with everything generative AI and how fast it's being developed. And in the U.S., the lack of, at least right now, regulation is misinformation as well, right? So I see this as, you know, when someone passes away, when a famous person passes, you know, there's always, you know, rumors swirling on the internet and all these different things. I see this, especially when someone famous, you know, comes out and, you know, passes or maybe they don't, you know, using this technology, you know, especially when someone's voice is so readily out there available on the internet, TV interviews, movies, whatever, you know, I can see people using this technology for misinformation and creating if someone has passed, creating something in their voice and saying, oh, I'm not actually dead. I'm doing this, this, and this. And, you know, there's already schemes, right? there's already schemes that people are using this technology to say oh you know this is your grandson i'm stuck in a different you know it's like all those email scams right that have been around for decades people are using kind of this this voice cloning for those reasons so i don't know that's true yeah i was thinking about that as you started giving that that is a good example like you know how
Starting point is 00:28:56 how can people use this probably negatively so it'll be that'd be interesting yeah um and sayeda that that that kind of goes to answer your last question i think we'll actually maybe create an episode on this in the future about human rights in AI. So without, because that one would take a very long time to dip into. So we'll have to get to that. But I do think, say that at that with human rights specifically, that requires a deep dive because there's so many implications, you know, and especially like with that piece right there with China and being able to clone people's voices, being able to clone them as people,
Starting point is 00:29:41 right? Like you can generate your own like digital avatar. If you're watching us, I promise, this is actually me and Brandon in real life, but we could clone, you know, our likeness to speak for us, to have video, to present for us. So the human rights piece, I definitely want to tackle a little bit more. Tristan, what's up? How you do it? So Tristan, you know, commenting on that story out of China is just saying, I think it's a great way to have loved ones who've passed on, but still be able to read books. Oh, gosh, such a good idea. You know, and then saying, yeah, of course, there's going to be bad actors. But yeah, I do think that's a great idea. And they have those, you know, some, you know, toy companies, you know, will have something if you have, you know, somebody in your life who's passing where they can kind of record their voice on, you know, a stuffed animal. or a children's book, right? So that's been, I guess, I hate to call it a market for products,
Starting point is 00:30:42 but that's been out there. But I do think so many people, you know, pass unexpectedly or don't take advantage of that while the person is still living. So Tristan, I do think that's a good point that that's, that will be great kind of after the fact for so many people that, you know, had someone passed on years ago or they never did, you know, do those kind of like voice recordings. Brandon, I do think that what Tristan brings up is a pretty good use case. No, I agree.
Starting point is 00:31:08 I like that a lot. I think that would be an awesome idea. Yeah. Like when people actually use it for good. You know, that's, but that's what this gets to. You know, there's all this technology. I think of it like the internet, but, you know, times 10. And it's like, was the internet used for good?
Starting point is 00:31:24 Absolutely. Was it used to create chaos and society and just, you know, help push. war and terror and bullying like yes right so there's two sides to the coin just like there was with the internet with with the invention of the internet it connected people that brought people together it helped us you know research diseases much faster and you know all these great things but there was an ugly side to the internet and letting the world talk to each other as well so i do think you know tristan kind to your point i think that's a great like fantastic use case you know being able to take someone who passed, you know, years ago and, you know, being able to use their voice for that.
Starting point is 00:32:05 But, yeah, I do think on the flip side, like what you said, there's going to be people who ruin it for sure. Brandon, we wrapped it up. What are you, what are you like as you look over the past week or what's to come? What are you going to be keeping your eye on? We obviously have a lot of really cool guests lined up for the rest of the week. But what are you going to kind of be paying attention to in AI this week or what do you think people should be paying attention to.
Starting point is 00:32:33 Definitely continue keeping an eye on Google just because of the event that they had last week where they just announced a ton of things we went over some of that last week. So if we were free to go check out those episodes. But I think, you know, with them releasing this new text to dialogue, I'm curious, like, if they have any other things just in the background that they're waiting to just release. So Google will be one. And then I think maybe also if meta, I don't know, I think meta, quite besides, you know, their huge announcement about their new chip, I'd be curious to see
Starting point is 00:33:05 kind of what else comes out about that or if there's anything else that they have going on that maybe we don't know about. So those are my two personal companies of interest that I'm going to be taking a look at. Otherwise, I feel like every day there's something new that I don't expect. Oh, there is. But that is what we're here for. So with that, Brandon, thank you. Thank you for jumping on this morning. Also, go to your everyday AI.com. What Brandon talked about, we're spending hours every single day to help everyday people make, like, understand what's going on. And, you know, we actually spent a lot of time on the newsletter. The second half specifically to say, hey, here's, here's what went on in the world of AI today. And here's how you can actually
Starting point is 00:33:52 use it. So, you know, when we talk about economic uncertainty and job security and all of those things, that's one of the main things that we're trying to do with this newsletter, not just to help you keep your job and grow in your career, but also to grow your business. The flip side of this is there's so much potential to be able to do things in minutes or seconds that used to take hours or days or weeks. So there's so much potential to use all of these updates, to use all this new technology. for you and your business. So make sure to check it out your EverydayAI.com. With that, we hope to see you back tomorrow and every day at Everyday AI.
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