How will the AI Bill of Rights protect you?
Plus, making massive improvements to machine learning, but at what cost?
We’re back with another edition of Machine Learnings, brought to you by the folks at Heyday.
If you haven’t checked it out yet, Heyday is an AI-powered research assistant that helps you retain more of what you learn by resurfacing content you forgot about. Heyday gives software founders, investors, academic researchers, and writers a browser with superpowers.
One thing is very apparent about our amazing customer base. They love the tool, and it keeps getting better over time as you train your personal model. See for yourself.
Better yet, try Heyday for free today.
Awesome, not awesome.
#Awesome
#Not Awesome
What we're reading.
1/ Google has joined Meta with a standard text-to-video tool, but they’ve also rolled out an alternate version. Here’s analysis of both. Learn more from The Verge >
2/ The White House has unveiled the first AI Bill of Rights, with five protections each person should have in the coming (now?) AI age. Learn more from the MIT Technology Review >
3/ But, what’s the impact beyond the public sector? One author thinks Big Tech will be untouched. Learn more from Wired >
4/ Tesla’s AI Day brought us…Optimus. Elon Musk thinks you may have a $20k robot in your home in 2-3 years. Learn more from the BBC >
5/ [Launch] Unveiling…an AI stroller. This could be huge for parents in hilly lands (like our HQ in San Francisco!). Learn more from Axios >
6/ On the back of a mildly terrifying art demonstration and repeated general fears, prominent robotics firms penned an open note condemning weaponization of robots. Learn more from TechCrunch >
7/ [Infographic] AI is already coming for creativity, and this graphic is a great summarization of the wealth of tools in our current marketplace. Get learning. Learn more from Twitter >
Research for this edition of Machine Learnings was enhanced by Heyday, the AI-powered research assistant.