The AI Daily Brief: Artificial Intelligence News and Analysis - A Manhattan Project for AI Infrastructure

Episode Date: September 26, 2024

Sam Altman and OpenAI have pitched the White House on an ambitious AI infrastructure plan, aiming to build 5 gigawatt data centers across the U.S. This potential “Manhattan Project” for AI is desi...gned to secure America’s leadership in AI development while creating thousands of jobs and boosting the economy. Also covered in this episode: the rollout of OpenAI’s advanced voice mode, updates from Google DeepMind, and Hollywood’s deepening involvement with AI technology. Stay updated on the most critical developments in AI. Learn how to use AI with the world's biggest library of fun and useful tutorials: https://besuper.ai/ Use code 'youtube' for 50% off your first month. Concerned about being spied on? Tired of censored responses? AI Daily Brief listeners receive a 20% discount on Venice Pro. Visit ⁠⁠⁠https://venice.ai/nlw⁠⁠⁠ and enter the discount code NLWDAILYBRIEF. The AI Daily Brief helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to the podcast version of The AI Daily Brief wherever you listen: https://pod.link/1680633614 Subscribe to the newsletter: https://aidailybrief.beehiiv.com/ Join our Discord: https://bit.ly/aibreakdown

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Today on the AI Daily Brief, we are talking about what appears to be a potential Manhattan project for AI infrastructure buildout. The AI Daily Brief is a daily podcast and video about the most important news and discussions in AI. To join the conversation, follow the Discord link in our show notes. Welcome back to the AI Daily Brief. Quick note, once again, I am traveling this week, so the episodes are going to be a little bit different, at least from a format perspective. And today, there is so much news that we're going to do an extended headlines edition, where we touch briefly on just about a dozen different. stories. For those of you wondering if the summer lull is over, boy, is it over. We kick off today with the latest report about Sam Altman's big ambitions on an infrastructure buildout for artificial intelligence. Bloomberg reports that OpenAI pitched the White House on an
Starting point is 00:00:51 unprecedented their word data center buildout. Basically, it appears as though OpenAI has been pitching the Biden White House on the fact that we are going to need a huge amount of power to develop advanced AI. You might remember in Altman's piece that we read recently the intelligence age, he talked about how if we don't do this sort of build-out, wars will ultimately be fought over access to AI, and it will just be a tool for the rich to get richer. Now, apparently, after the meeting, Open AI shared with government officials a paper that outlined their plans and the benefits of building five gigawatt data centers in various U.S. states.
Starting point is 00:01:24 Now, if you are like many of us and don't know what a gigawatt actually represents, five gigawatts is roughly the equivalent of five nuclear reactors, or put another way, produces enough power-to-power 3 million homes. The benefits that OpenAI listed from this weren't just about maintaining the lead in AI development, but included things like creating thousands of new jobs, boosting GDP, and more. For months now, we have been hearing about Altman and Open AI's efforts to build a global coalition around this sort of massive infrastructure buildout. Way back at the beginning of this year, the number 7 trillion had been thrown around in terms of the amount that Altman was looking to raise. And recently, it's appeared that the efforts have been more focused on starting in the
Starting point is 00:02:01 United States. A spokesperson for OpenAI somewhat reinforced this message, providing a statement to Bloomberg that said, OpenAI is actively working to strengthen AI infrastructure in the U.S., which we believe is critical to keeping America at the forefront of global innovation, boosting reindustrialization across the country, and making AI's benefits accessible to everyone. In many cases, old analogies like Moonshots or the Manhattan Project have become cliches, but this really is one of those areas that warrants the cliche. The rest of the Bloomberg article basically reads, with experts explaining why this is impossible, which if anything is just likely to make Silicon Valley want to do it even more. Now, for those of us chat GPT users, perhaps the more
Starting point is 00:02:40 exciting OpenAI announcement, was that advanced voice mode has finally rolled out to all plus users. I have been beating my head against the wall for months waiting for this thing, and I just noticed as I pulled up chat GPT yesterday that finally it was here. I have not yet had a chance to play around with it, but I'm excited to dig in. Now, one list, little note. In his tweet late last night, Altman said, Rollout completed early amazing work by the team, except for jurisdictions that require additional external review. Referencing that, Dean W. Ball wrote, under a strict reading of the AI Act, chat GPT advanced voice is illegal in EU workplaces and schools because the system can
Starting point is 00:03:17 recognize users' emotions. That's prohibited by the AI Act. Many jumped in to point out that this is a great example of how regulations can have unintended consequences, because it seems very unlikely that EU regulators were thinking about something like chat GPT advanced voice mode when they wrote these rules. Yesterday, we also got some model updates. Google DeepMind announced that they were releasing two new production-ready versions of Gemini 1.5 Pro and Flash. They continue for tasks like summarization, question answering, and extraction. The default output length of the updated models is now around 5 to 20% shorter than previous versions, making them easier to use. Now, unlike the recent 01 announcement from OpenAI, which was really about,
Starting point is 00:03:56 a sea change in how artificial intelligence was delivered, these seem to be much more practical updates. Some weren't thrilled. AI entrepreneur Bindu Ready writes, SIE, OpenAI releases 01 that ACE's IQ tests, and Google releases some minor update to Gemini 1.5. How is this possible when they have 100x the resources, 10x the talent, and 10x everything? However, not everyone saw it in that same way. Another AI entrepreneur, Sully Omar wrote, been using the new Gemini Flash models and it's good, like really good. probably the best low-cost model by a wide margin. With the right prompts, it's better than GPT-40 and Sonnet at large context reasoning, but not coding. And it turns out that this low-cost thing may be exactly what this update is really about.
Starting point is 00:04:37 In fact, Bindu Ready came back once again later and said, Gemini's real superpower, it's 10x cheaper than 01. Predictably, the new version is better than the old version, and Gemini now trails behind O-1 Sonnet and GPT-40, but is significantly better than Lama 405B. The real story, however, is the cost. Gemini is 10x cheaper than O1 preview. The price to performance ratio makes it pretty competitive to 4-0. And so perhaps this update was not about catching up to O1 from a capacity standpoint,
Starting point is 00:05:05 but about being a practical option for developers who are conscious of cost. Today's episode is brought to you by Venice. Venice is a private, uncensored generative AI app. It accesses open source models to enable text, image, and code generation without the fear of being spied on or having your data exploited. Discuss anything with Venice without concern about it being monitored, sold, or given to advertisers and governments. Venice is different because your conversations and creations are kept securely within the browser, never stored or accessible by Venice. Unlike other AI apps, Venice won't tell you what's okay to say or not. Venice won't patronize you. It simply provides direct access to machine intelligence, no topics are
Starting point is 00:05:41 off limits, no ideas, or taboo. With Venice, you're in control of the AI as you should be. Pro subscriptions are available for $49 a year or $8 per month. AI Daily Brief listeners receive a 20% discount on Venice Pro. Visit venice.a.i slash NLW and enter the discount code NLW Daily Brief. That's NLW Daily Brief, all one word. Today's episode is brought to you by Super Intelligent, which is of course our platform that helps you learn how to use AI tools and perhaps even more importantly, gives you ideas on the best use cases that are actually going to help you achieve whatever it is you want to achieve. To recognize the end of summer and back to school slash back to work, we are running our best promotion ever when you sign up for Super Intelligent using code so back, your first month will be
Starting point is 00:06:30 100% free. The platform features over 600 fun, highly practical AI tutorials that get you using AI fast and with an eye to actually transforming how you get things done. We've just launched Super for Teams. So if you have a group of people at your company that want to figure out how to use AI together, I highly suggest you check it out. But for those of you who are using super intelligent as an individual, once again, if you sign up for super intelligent between now and the end of the month using code so back, you will get your first month 100% free. Go to B-Supert.a.I. And check it out today. Speaking of cost developers in revenue, CNBC reported that Anthropic is expected to hit $1 billion in revenue this year, which would be a thousand percent increase year over year. Of that,
Starting point is 00:07:14 around 60 to 75% of their revenue is coming from third-party API. Another rumor swirling around Anthropic are reports that the company is in talks about a new round with investors in a deal that would value the company between 30 and 40 billion. That would be roughly double the valuation from funding that closed earlier this year. This seemed pretty inevitable, given that OpenAI is also out there fundraising. Although for now, this remains just reports. And speaking of just reports, there are rumors swirling everywhere around right now that we are about to get a new anthropic model, perhaps 3.5 opus. I'm sure that will be the subject
Starting point is 00:07:47 of the AI Daily Brief as soon as it happens. Now, another big story from yesterday had to do with AI and Hollywood, and this was kind of multidimensional. On the one hand, you definitely see an integration. Titanic and Avatar director James Cameron, for example, has joined Stability AI's board of directors. This is a huge coup given how much stability has struggled recently. In a statement, stability said that Cameron's coming on was a, quote, monumental statement for the AI industry as a whole, describing Cameron as someone who, quote, lives in the future and waits for the rest of us to catch up. Now, obviously, this follows recent news that Lionsgate had signed a deal with runway, and so the trend line seems pretty clear of a Hollywood integration with AI rather than a dismissal of AI. At the same time, the other Hollywood AI news yesterday was that a group of famous actors and directors wrote an open letter urging Governor Gavin Newsom to sign SB 1047.
Starting point is 00:08:35 More than 125 actors, directors, producers, and others signed the letter, one of whom, actually wrote it as well, although we don't know exactly who it was. The group basically said that they did not believe that threats from AI were just the stuff of science fiction anymore, and of course tried to dismiss the people who don't want SB 1047 as just billionaire opponents. A fairly standard reaction, at least from the AI Entrepreneur Sphere, was summed up by this tweet from Melinda B. Chu, who wrote, Joseph Gordon-Levett is an effective altruist, like SBF and also Carolyn Ellison, and a child actor from Third Rock from the Sun. He's not an authority on AI. L.A. Times should also cover Techies opinions on the Oscars or Emmys.
Starting point is 00:09:12 This L3 engineer at Google thought Barbie should have won for Best Picture. Barbie was robbed. Print it. The argument, of course, being that this set of people don't really have a technical basis to make factual judgments about these risks. However, ultimately, politics is a game of influence, and so to the extent that Governor Newsom views this as a political headache, it could be meaningful in how this all plays out. Just to round out the entertainment industry engagement sandwich, Variety also reports that Deepak Chopra has signed on with 11 Labs to lend his voice to their reader app. Again, whatever Hollywood thinks about AI regulation, it's very clear that these spaces are going to be intertwined
Starting point is 00:09:48 sooner rather than later. Over in chip land, Intel has launched its latest AI chip. These are the Xion 6 CPU and the Gotti 3 AI accelerator. Now, this comes hot on the heels of a Wall Street Journal report that Qualcomm is potentially looking to take over Intel as a way to bolster its own chip business. At the same time, Apollo Global Management might make a multi-billion investment to back Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger's Big Bold Turnaround Plan. Basically, it seems like something is going to change at Intel, although it's not exactly clear what right now. A few more small stories before we get out of here. The steady integration of AI into every service that you touch continues.
Starting point is 00:10:24 Reddit is now bringing AI-powered automatic translation to new languages, with a goal, of course, to make it more accessible to a broader number of users. Five months ago, Reddit introduced site-wide translation for French speakers, and one of the really cool things here is that the way that this is deployed is users from two totally different language groups can have a conversation in the comments or in Reddit threads really without having to manually translate everything. They can just toggle the setting and be off having a conversation without linguistic borders. This, I think, is something that lots of people are excited about is a huge benefit of AI, and so it's exciting to see it actually come to market. Lastly, today, a little one
Starting point is 00:10:59 from Arvon Shrinivas, the CEO of Perplexity. He noticed that in an interview with famous investors, Stanley Drucken Miller, he was talking with Squawk, is Joe Kernan and said, do you want to hear how I invested in Argentina? It's a funny story. I wasn't at Davos, but I saw the speech in Davos, and it was about one in the afternoon in my office. I dialed up perplexity and I said, give me the five most liquid ADRs in Argentina. In other words, friends, it is not just techie early adopters. These tools are starting to get everywhere. However, that is going to do it today for the AI Daily Brief. Even while traveling, I will continue to bring you the most pertinent and interesting AI news.
Starting point is 00:11:31 Appreciate you listening or watching as always. And until next time, peace.

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