AI That Lies Better Than Humans: Why the Future of AI Could Trick Us Without Us Even Realizing It. OpenAI reveals a new threat in the world of AI – super-smart models that can hide their evil intentions. And yes, that means punishing AI for “bad thoughts” only makes it more insidious.
Artificial intelligence
Silicon Valley is excited about AI agents. Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, predicts that agents will “enter the workforce” this year. Microsoft’s Satya Nadella promises that they will replace certain scientific jobs, and Salesforce’s Marc Benioff is aiming to make his company “the leading provider of digital workforces” through its “agent” services. But there’s one big problem: no one knows exactly what an AI agent even is. What is an AI agent anyway?
Are we past the era of AI chatbots patiently waiting for us to give them commands, and entering the era of autonomous AI agents that don't need our input? If you ask Chinese AI visionaries, the answer is simple: Absolutely yes!
Artificial intelligence like ChatGPT is still a relatively new phenomenon, but some questions have already become hot topics of discussion. One of them is certainly whether it is necessary to be polite when communicating with such tools. Is it reasonable to thank, ask for answers or improvements, or are these just unnecessary remnants of human etiquette in the digital world? Should we be polite to artificial intelligence?
We live in an era that Jeremy Rifkin predicted decades ago in his book The End of Work (1995): technology is not only changing the nature of work, but in some cases completely eliminating traditional professions. Marketing, where creativity and data processing have long been considered the exclusive domain of humans, is experiencing tectonic shifts – artificial intelligence (AI) is blurring the lines between human and machine work. So - artificial intelligence and the end of marketing professions.
Google has dropped another bombshell on the digital search world. This time, they’re expanding their AI Insights to even more queries and introducing “AI Mode,” which promises a chat-like experience right inside their search engine. What does this mean for those of us who surf the web, and for those of us who make a living from clicking? Let’s take a look at how Google is changing the rules of the game and what we can expect.
AI journalism? Imagine a morning in 2030: you wake up, open your news app, and instead of a regular article, you’re greeted by a personalized story created instantly by artificial intelligence (AI), tailored to your interests, written in your native language, and even supported by a video where an AI presenter who looks like your favorite journalist reads the news just for you. This is no longer distant science fiction, but a reality predicted by current trends in technology and media. This is AI journalism in 2030.
Apple and AI?! AI has become a central battleground for tech giants. Google is aggressively investing in its AI labs like DeepMind and Gemini, Microsoft has become a major player in generative AI with its multi-billion dollar investment in OpenAI, Meta is developing its own Llama language models, and Amazon remains strong in AI infrastructure with Alexa and AWS. Apple? It's there, but... where exactly?
Artificial general intelligence (AGI) could fundamentally change the way governments, economies and public finances operate in the next decade. Technology that is already outperforming humans in data analysis and complex problem solving could take over key tasks currently in the hands of politicians, consultants and economists. From faster and more accurate lawmaking to full transparency in the use of public funds, AGI promises a revolution that could significantly reduce human error and political bias.
If you ask experts when we will achieve artificial general intelligence (AGI), you will get different answers. Some say we will get there in 2025, others claim that AGI is already here – it’s just a little different than we imagined.
Norwegian company 1X has unveiled its latest prototype humanoid robot, Neo Gamma, a household assistant that is expected to perform various household tasks in the future. Its predecessor, Neo Beta, shown last August, already indicated the direction of development, and now an improved version is coming, intended for testing in a home environment.
Elon Musk has unveiled Grok 3, his most advanced artificial intelligence yet, promising better logical reasoning, a deeper understanding of programming, and a unique personality. Does it really outperform OpenAI's GPT-4 and Google's Gemini 2? The early data is promising.