tv Shift Deutsche Welle June 10, 2023 2:15pm-2:30pm CEST
2:15 pm
swati or less size, i might be a little see a fax epithet in that safe. ok, lots of rivalry is going on aside from the big game itself, the w sports corresponding oliver moody in istanbul, thanks for coming up, scientists are training a i to interpret brainwaves. well, the technologies to be able to read our minds. find out next on shift. i'm excited for me in the entire news team here in berlin. thanks for the or sports scoring. we say they were about never giving up sports flies every weekend
2:16 pm
on d w, dw, so on picks talk. we in fact, every day, the world wide web feel free to leave the, the timeline because we can take the different w call in the world and pops up on your info is and all the input your w story. now, on to the, when a i read online, soon, scientists have already trained an ai to interpret your brain way. also, experts argue that a poet, beauty fills up, potentially dangerous to the point of making you sick. we take a look at snapshot this morphia and how it comes about and why that's natasha. use of data with u. s. intelligence of agencies and who else demands use information
2:17 pm
from big tech companies. these are the topics that have move the tech world, the train day. i can pick your brain and recreate the image just you have to looked at all stories that you have listened to all by interpreting your brain weight. those are the findings of scientists and japan, and the u. s. a. in the future fulfill our every wish. as soon as we think it and how do we get the best results out of ai tools. now, at the university of was stuck in japan, participants in the study looked at thousands of pictures and set the brain scans reported. those guns were used to train an ai dakota model. it load which scanned represents what picture they showed. the model was able to recreate images just by studying the brain with of participants why they were looking at images. and it doesn't just work with pictures. researches in the u. s. trained in
2:18 pm
a model using friend scans of people listening to pop costs and model of ben managed to create a somewhat similar text to what they had listened to in process but sofa. it's only works if the model is trained on your individual brain activity. if you cooperate, if you wanted to and you could step this, think about something else and create different brain wave that way. so a one full full a why the streams anytime soon in order to communicate with an a and make it work for us? brain with won't help us right now, but i can already help you a lot. if you feed it with the right prompts, how to prompt, there is no secret magical prompting dictionary, a system a constantly learning and evolving. yes, how you get better results prompt and english. even though a lot of a i models speak several languages. they've received
2:19 pm
a lot of training and english off the ai what needs to fulfill a task. you can also ask a model to write prompts for another ai, an image generator, for example, use train of thought prompting. gives me a, an example of how you want to solve a task at a step by step description of the thoughts you wanted to include this way. you might be able to get better results. but always keep in mind that a lot of models have flaws. which lots to keep in mind. a i know only what it's been told chapter cpg was only trans with tex, published before september 2021. so it's contra related to recent events is biased because it's training data often is prejudiced against women. all minority is like the eligibility q community find the way from the training data into the results. when image generate michonne is asked to create pictures of a doctor. it will be male, acute in person instead will be female. so always check if it results on defensive
2:20 pm
. it doesn't keep your data safe. samsung employees as cheap each, each fixed improve coat, they uploaded it, and by accident the corporate secrets that could now be included in the checkbooks future responses. the same applies to your personal data. in many cases, your input is stored and used to further train these models. are you using ai tools in your everyday life already? and what's your experience with prompting flu? this in a cute, a no off. so let's face altering apps like face june of face, of like, getting better and better at producing real looking photos and even videos. but some experts argue that a public field a potentially dangerous to the point of making you sick. what's the fuss about face tuning today? all you need to enhance itself is, is an f face to,
2:21 pm
and one of the most popular beauties field trips is counting more than 200000000 download worldwide, and that dozens of others face up. you can make up to 2 plus airbrush the list goes on and on and social absolutely tick tock or snatch it has been offering integrated beauty filled us for quite some time being used on a mess of scale. here's what the study that was conducted in the us 2021 says 80 percent of gross under the age of 13 has already use the filter or re touching apps to change the way they look in the photos. okay, but how does one to to look pretty and pick just make one sick? nephew an actual, he noticed that an increasing number of cosmetic surgery patients were bringing heavy edits itself is to the consultation appointments. well, this phenomena is a raw, the severe case of body to small fia, but it shows what damage has display of supposedly perfect human beauty on social media can do. it leads to completely unrealistic ideas of what you should look like
2:22 pm
. and that can cost anxiety and depression cosmetics such as have reports of the patients who bring in heavy ext itself is often surprised that that all the photo graphic results cannot be replicated in real life. because it's so easy in an app. so how do they work anyway? how does face tuning work? a huge sofa, so essentially ultimate, a photo editing tools to use artificial intelligence and computer vision. the software detects the face, and then overlays and invisible facial template. it consists of dozens of dots to create a sort of mesh. once that has been built, all kinds of graphics can be attached to the mesh pending on the app. this can be adding some digital makeup reship sets of spatial features or adding some devils for what is being done about it. while the hasn't been attempts to band this up sofa, some european countries are now taking steps to at least regulate the use of
2:23 pm
a beauty of filters. they are trying to fall. social media advertises and influence so as to admit when they have altered their physical image, especially instances and celebrities are presenting themselves and assuming they authentic wait online and use us often believe that what they see is 100 percent. real know i introduced in the, in 2021 celebrities. some instances must indicate on social media whether a photograph has been re touched in the process, someone to, to lot to go even further and encompass all content and social media fronts is in the process of passing a similar lot, but for both photos and videos. french, one edition, we know the mass at the measure is to limit the destructive psychological effect of filters. and the u. k is currently working on drafting and always comparable tense, but apart from the state regulations, it in fact really comes down to us uses. we need to constantly remind ourselves that what we see online is very often not a depiction of reality. what do you think of these apps? are they a threat?
2:24 pm
how do you feel about such altered faces? let us know what are you using in stuff, facebook or what step? well, be wary of the data. you ship the parent company. meta could pass on person. the dates of european uses to us all for a tooth. that's why the social media chime has just been fine in the you with the records, some of the 1.2000000000. why? what metro allow sensitive data to be accessed by us government services? what else is this data being shipped? who exactly is being affected? let's take a look how the record find helps you. measure transfers the face off. it's use us to the u. s. why the company claims slides will to the business model, use the data needs to be bundled, to process it in an effective way. and to set targeted s space on the results. thoughts, surveillance laws allow intelligence agencies like the end, if they've brought access to the data from non u. s. uses union quotes,
2:25 pm
also competitive take precautions against these last before, but it didn't happen. so now the us left mess up with this record fine in order to protect your pin citizens data from the u. s. it could be an important step and force big tech companies to protect our data better even beyond the you. that's important because it's not just u. s. also are issues that may be interested in your data. your own government could be to us big tech aiding the n s. s. mess surveillance program. we've known that since 2013 thanks to whistle blow. edward snowden, now, 10 years later, government and intelligence agencies are reported the receiving even more data from social media provider. who else has metro sharing data with matter has been publishing and transparency reports in 2016. it details the number of times governments of ospital access to the own citizens data on its platform. in the latest issue,
2:26 pm
the us stopping the list with more than 64000 requests farther closely by india. and next comes germany and for sale with about $70500.00 total request submitted each in the report. metro states measure response to government requests for data in accordance with a particular law and a chance of service each and every requests were receive is cassidy reviewed for legal sufficiency and we may reject or require greater specificity or requests that appear overly broad or vague. so in other words, unless a country slot does not allow for use of data to be passed on much, i may indeed handed over the published numbers seem to indicate that meta is actually quite willing to give out information in more than 75 percent of all cases, at least some form of data was produced, which states i do governments access or beyond the basic data like user names, addresses and contact information tech companies like metro as google, apple,
2:27 pm
microsoft and amazon can often access a lot more. for example, uses emails, text messages, call log, photos, videos documents, contactless. i'm calling to that. think of government or storage is a very intimate look into your private life. what is this data being requested and used for? in many countries, law enforcement agencies monitor social media to assist with criminal and civil investigations if they have good reason to believe someone's involved in criminal activity. they might ask platform providers for access to that persons use a profile. this can also happen in connection with public safety. for example, before big events authorities might want to scan, use us profiles to assess risk, get another reason of immigration and travel screening. and here we can get an idea of the ethical implications that come with platforms for meeting use of data to authorities. imagine those requests targeting certain activities. you might think this kind of surveillance doesn't apply to you because you've got nothing to hide.
2:28 pm
but government monitoring of social media data can and has led to people being accused of crimes even wrong. and it's definitely in that's free communication. what can you do to protect yourself? the recent loading and the you pod from the record fine says match a must return your pin, use the data to your pin service. but apart from that, that's nothing you can do to be entirely safe from being monitored by your own government or elsewhere. you'd have to come see if they did the 2 online accounts to guarantee that. and this does not apply to meta and on, but also to google m as long and microsoft. what do you think? do you get if your government has access to your data? that's it from me by and see you next time the, the, the,
2:29 pm
it's the instrument of the year, the mandolin and she is its ambassador. avi, i'll be taught the is really virtual. so has promoted the small string instrument on great stages. the world over we catch up with him in his adopted home early in your room. 2 the w of human kind drive in south africa. more of our ancestors boston's can be found here, anywhere else on earth. research and joe's a product asks the question when, but more importantly, why does human beings come into existence? the answer is a scientific breakthrough. in 45 minutes on dw the
2:30 pm
nurse to us. that's why we listen to their stories reporter every weekend on d w. the small. but my d, the mandolin is the instrument of the year. and virtuoso, i'd be, i'd be touch shows, that's why it deserves to be heard. what's the human library? it's where people take the place of books and tell their live stories to strangers . it was at the heart of the industrial revolution.
21 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=616384493)