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How to spot ChatGPT-generated content
Spotlight: Musician deepfakes herself
Welcome back!
Have you ever wondered what having a digital clone of yourself would be like? A popular British musician has — and she created an AI deepfake of herself to automate the most tedious parts of her job. That and more…
In today’s Daily Update:
🗞️ Anthropic launches Claude mobile app and new enterprise plan
🤖 How to spot ChatGPT-generated content
📸 British singer creates deepfake of herself
🚨 AI Roundup: Four quick hits
Read time: 2 minutes
TOP STORY
🗞️ Anthropic launches Claude mobile app and new enterprise plan
Source: Anthropic
Yesterday Anthropic announced the Claude iOS app and a new Team plan as it looks to challenge OpenAI’s dominance in the LLM market.
The details:
The new Team plan offers businesses increased message limits and access to the entire Claude 3 family of models.
Anthropic promises that Claude helps protect sensitive business information.
The Claude iOS app is free to download for all Claude users, and it syncs with chats on other devices.
Claude’s mobile app also features vision capabilities, meaning it can accept photos and files from your phone as inputs.
Why it matters: Researchers say that Claude 3 Opus is the most advanced AI model in the world today. Backed by Amazon and Google, Anthropic’s new offerings could help the company close the gap on market-leading OpenAI.
AI INSIGHT
🤖 How to spot ChatGPT-generated content
DALL-E 3
ChatGPT users around the world have come together on a Reddit thread to share ways to spot content generated by the world’s most popular chatbot.
What to look for:
Many users agree that ChatGPT tends to draw conclusions too often, even when they are not needed.
ChatGPT also overuses certain words (ex. delve, nuanced, crucial, essential, furthermore and moreover).
Stylized language and phrases like “in this digital world” and “let’s dive deeper” are also indicators of ChatGPT-generated text.
ChatGPT also tends to produce sentences and paragraphs of uniform length.
Why it matters: As of today, there’s no surefire way to detect AI-generated text. Some of these tips may help you recognize ChatGPT-generated content without having to rely on subpar AI content detectors.
INDUSTRY SPOTLIGHT
📸 British singer creates deepfake of herself
DALL-E 3
British singer, songwriter and dancer FKA Twigs (born Tahliah Barnett) revealed that she used AI to create a deepfake of herself that can interact with fans and journalists.
Key points:
Barnett says her deepfake is trained on her personality and exact tone of voice to speak multiple languages.
She wants her digital clone to handle “press and promo” so that she can focus on making music.
“AI Twigs” will be deployed later this year to control the artist’s online social media interactions.
Barnett emphasized that she has complete control over her digital clone, and that third parties shouldn’t be allowed to use AI to profit off of artists without their consent.
Why it matters: We’re missing lots of technical details here, so “AI Twigs” could end up being a complete bust. Still, if Barnett’s digital clone functions like she claims it will, we could be getting a sneak preview of the future of synthetic social media content. Influencers and artists may eventually be able to completely automate their online presence.
MORE TRENDING NEWS
🚨 AI Roundup: Four quick hits
Rabbit R1 (Source: The Verge)
Airbnb taps into AI to streamline customer service.
Rabbit’s AI gadget is exposed for being a simple Android app.
Nvidia updates its free chatbot with new AI models and multimodal support.
Google urges U.S. to update immigration laws to attract more AI talent.
THAT’S ALL FOR TODAY