If youāre behind on whatās happening with the robot uprising, have no fear. Hereās a quick look at some of the weirdest and wildest artificial intelligence news from the past week. Also, donāt forget to check out our weekly AI write-up, which will go into more detail on this same topic.
After stumbling into a giant controversy over a change to its Terms of Service, Zoom has backtracked. This week, someone noticed that the videoconferencing giant had updated its terms back to give it the ability to use user data to train its AI platforms. A furor of privacy-related outrage followed. Now, Zoom has updated its terms again, this time to make it explicitly clear that it will not be doing that.
New cybersecurity research from IBM suggests that large language models can be easily weaponized to aid in cybercriminal schemes. Researchers hypothesize ways in which bad actors could access a businessās LLM and exploit it to leak sensitive proprietary information or weaponize the algorithm to cause further havoc within the organization.
A new DARPA competition launched this week seeks to incentivize the development of new automated cybersecurity technologies to protect critical infrastructure.
Disney has launched an internal task force to spread AI throughout its many corporate fiefdoms. Itās unclear exactly what the automation is going to be used for yet but āin-parkā experiences are apparently a focus of consideration.
An author stumbled upon books attributed to her on Amazon that she didnāt actually write. The culprit? AI, of course.
Google recently made it known that itās going to scrape everything you post on the internet to train its AI algorithms. This week, it announced that if you donāt want that to happen, youāll have to āopt-out.ā Soooooo convenient, thanks dude!
Spotify recently announced a new beta for a less-than-optimal automated āDJā thatās supposed to help listeners curate their listening experience. As of this week, that DJ is going to available in many more countries around the globe. Huzzah.
An AI āmealbotā from New Zealand that was designed to deliver helpful cooking recipes to users instead spit out some decidedly less appetizing concoctions this week, including one that involved chlorine gas. Yum!