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tv   Smart New World  Deutsche Welle  August 3, 2024 12:30pm-2:01pm CEST

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to every single connection mapped out shows the geophysical reality, the on the board is what makes things the way they are mapped out, navigating a changing world. now on youtube, the after many, many years later, maybe we, when we recognized that the moment when everything change in size use is going to be true in everything as humans. we have to 1st of all understand that this is going to happen. many technologists try to solve human problems using technology when actually what we need are human solutions. ok,
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just to look at the question is, what does it mean to be human? what are the things always to be proud to offer shows because it said, i find this moment extremely profound because it gets really forced us to think, to executive of course, this is what makes humans human scale to reach to you. there's a whole lot at stake here, careers, unbelievable amounts of money and who gets to shape the future cost the and it's already become a global race for supremacy in the age of artificial intelligence. china,
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the united states and the european union of buying for economic price, political influence and power. so other be tech companies and style shops, a house on the hills. those who lose go be no 2nd chances. jonas and rulers founded one of the most influential european companies with his health. the european union could catch up with the world's i lead. it's become independent from the us and china, secure press, press future, reduce it side. this is a watershed moment or your life for over the last it roll of the dice. you. europe wants to decide how to use technology in accordance with european values come in. it has to be able to build that technology itself. it's thomas was because founded housing space. it's a major open source i platform. he wants to store one of the most powerful
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technologies in human history from ending up in the hands of a few corporations. for point, i guess what we need is a multitude of players. the not just one of the times i, i, we don't want a future with such a fundamental technology because in the hands of a single company, there were plenty of films where that's the market at the stove. the one company that controls everything. they really descriptions the show is a chinese, a entrepreneur. he wants his company g, a i to be successful on both the wisdom and chinese markets. so what role the chinese companies play in this global race? and how is the chinese communist party using them to achieve its political goals, try to be po, to the for it basically serve as a brain, and this brain cannot be made to us, right? so this is some worries that the chinese government has the culture of each country,
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right? how each government loans this country well eventually be reflected into this brand . it is absolutely clear that of the highest levels of leadership in the united states and, and china, artificial intelligence is viewed as foundational to the future of economic and military power. how much i'm good enough to not to produce. we've created an economic and financial system that's based on the assumption that everything is going to keep running smoothly as possible. we get gas from russia, we americans look after us, so we don't need to spend money on our. most of the china is always friendly from google and we've gotten comfortable just kind of, i know we have to break out of that comfort and say so i can, we can go on the political offensive again. but if we can compete, we can create competitive conditions here and you know, we can meet sure that the cool companies we have do. you can also go and play a role in the global market and image screen that's already been made clear. and
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it's like the at the end of 2023 gym and vice chancellor role, the topic made significant progress towards these geo political goals. i left alpha a gym and i, i company raised around half a 1000000000 us from investors. it was one of the largest around severe pain financing to official intelligence technology. and it was a signal that the european union can produce elite players in the field of a lot of office founder and ceo is eunice andrew let's he's given priority to investment from jim and industry is a p boss and the shots quick return supermarket. retail is legal and coughlin
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a tom, a telephone go. i was an amateur radio enthusiast to to i started radios together and built my own antennas. we early on and my father had computers at home. so i was able to start programming and playing around with them at a very young age. that's biggest audits in cops today when we started out on use the term gender. today i didn't exist. hardly anyone had heard of open a i was we were very technical. if you knew we managed to create a category to finding innovations. we were just nerds. researchers and developers runs into us one voice, and there were times when i felt like i wasn't coping with the amount of work and the challenges every night. i couldn't answer emails until i was so tired. i fell off the couch. hard for that coach. and there were still things i was neglecting things which i didn't want to neglect. judge me for an honest thing that in spring
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2023, the european landscape was a lonely place. with the star shop of alpha, eunice intruders had to be only general cheese allied to, to compete. it's an international level, he'd acquired the expertise from his work. as a high ranking research at apple, suddenly he'd become one of the units great hopes in the global i race. to send bill, i'm from east in the law right now. we simply can't cope with the onslaught of potential customers and partners with. most of the german stock index companies have been in touch with lots of medium sized companies, just committed their a briefings press engagements, events on an unbelievable amount of stuff. and that to me, it's like the cambrian explosion right now. the effects was an incredible amount of new and creative things are emergency visit. we're the only europeans to be involved on this scale or the bias. the assumption that it was an exciting develop
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the we also had things like open yeah. and then maybe hours where even cooler looking of what is missing and what i think deserves more attention to you is, is why there are not more domestic companies that actually grow and scale. a lot of company leaders start of innovators end up going to the us and the access to capital is really one of the main challenges that one see does central office view most business clinic, long facebook. if you look at what we did off, if it's enabling technology always, cuz what i need for that is a carefully selected effective team of brilliant researchers about core. then i need money. hey, becca, it's more money than you normally get. as a german started up, make love all of these days. we're talking about billions and then call them and, and then you need partners to help you to, for, to the kind of help that money can't buy me. i've opened
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a uh it doesn't just get 10000000000 for microsoft them. it also gets incredible support in integrating its technology into all microsoft products and platforms online to phone. at the time i left off, i had 60 employees at various locations most for the company's headquarters in hardback, in southwest gemini. unlike open i drew, this wasn't gearing, he say i towards private uses the draw the industry and the public sector. but they tend to be sluggish, and not easy to notice. that post a challenge for you on a central unless he needed pilot projects to prove his technology works. there was a huge stand here and you're greeted by a virtual person has on this call on may i help you? where do you want to go? then i can use the screen. we have to keep moving in this direction. that's not good. that's my job. i is this time i know it is because now i have 4 to 4. very happy to still have you. if we get this, you'll probably be taking her well earned retirement soon. it's become
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a standard questions if i, if i ask if you'd like to stay on a little longer, i'm not fired because i need you because there aren't enough skilled workers coming in not to come as a, it's a big issue. as this phone space change, what's important for us, that's how it is we done on the solidarity does the tradition of course the main topic is innovation innovation. how to back is one of the 1st municipalities in the world to introduce an, a us citizen assistant using a language model provided by alice alpha and talk know, and quincy with whom do combines we have a partner, a customer with whom we can look at these new technologies, they also act as a testimonial for us, you're lucky because anyone can go and try it out with us. that's a huge advantage to that one's on because a lot of our customers don't want to be named right now. it's like they don't want people to know exactly what they're doing. so it's great to have
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a pilot customer with a bit of vision encourage he's in the audience. the hope is that in the long term, i will improve public administration and speed up services deep. i'm 45, i'm card sets, i just entered the question motor vehicle traffic on the be 37 by which is a busy road and then i get it to search. or of course, that's a very general question. the see the question now is what point in time is 75? that's what we're talking today or annually milan so that it's of course the i has to work out what the user actually wants. basie won't be $37.00 is close between 7 am and 6 pm. trudy of now i can ask, how do i apply for child depend, if it's not good, it does why it's on. it just wasn't the right time, sir. you can't find anything. now ahmed them, so the error messages that we get back from the public and from tests we do ourselves get passed on to our left alpha to figure out what needs to change to make the inputs more accurate. 60, it's always about the accuracy of the input. did i emailed it so you can always cut
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down about the technology is still in the test face and not yet liable. 2023 was a delicate time for alpha alpha, eunice and drew this needed fresh money from invest. it's meanwhile, microsoft and open i, we're getting more of an advantage. in fact, the race starts today and we're going to move, we're going to move fast. and for us, every day, we want to bring out new things. on march 14th, 2023. can i release chat g p t for the most powerful artificial intelligence. today's, just at the same time, greatly reduced costs for use it for you in a central us and his team was a threat to the business model. provide the problem about fly fishing from the district office on the floor. okay, and it goes on file is huge. awhile in the depths west of those we from say in this
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cool, clear water is, well i stay, i am the fish for these, the silver 3. why lights a dream or so it seems a whiny being sleek and sly with ancient instincts to live and die. yeah, goes on. yeah. well, yeah. they see the sub i had i went to an apartment with a number of colleagues and we watched on a, on a big project to screen the night spent of 64. someone had a chat to be part of a time so they could use to before we could play with it. and we were like, very impressed and surprised by how good it was. it's not upsetting when someone comes up with a great piece of technology because with researches and building technology and that's how it is. you know, when you're a violinist and you go and you watch the amazing saturday by an incredible violent,
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if you don't feel, you know, i should, it's all get off. you know, it's inspiring. i was a little stressed out. yeah. i was in the middle of conversations, but potential investors business partners and i knew that and every conversation i was, i was going into, somebody would say it, but they would have wanted to build t v t for mice 2 years ago. got $200000000.00 be the 1st model at that level of capabilities out of heidelberg, out of, out of europe. it costs a lot of frustration of the team and i saw that that's painful to see. and in fact, comparing open i was left also was absurd. open, i was almost half owned by check john, microsoft, which had pumped over $10000000000.00 into the company. you're in a central is had raised just 28000000 euros. still he wanted to take them on
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the stain on the enrollment at oak. besides, you were all under enormous pressure, we're fighting for survival. how we've created something, world class with a lot less money shopping because we're basically at the forefront on the highest level. and that's the one. this is about what we all know, that there's now a wave of microsoft money rolling towards us. and we can't do anything to stop it. if it needs to keep them, i can come in the future. i might find it difficult to make really french without the english words everywhere. yeah. yeah. because yeah, well, you understand truly this was feeling the heat from industry, top dogs,
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microsoft and open. i thomas, who was more relaxed, he co founded hacking face, which is 200 employees and offices in paris, new york, and to them, the company has both a successful platform with programs and companies can share i models and further develop the fios. i see the admission and the values that we push activity very european by some way of being careful about the data. trying to build something responsible, you know, and not just go fast and break it a centrally bit today on like how long that all the reception that me and the american values and chunk g b take with us on course. and we wondered whether we could set up a project to analyze and document that the benchmark, for example, is concerned with benchmarks that could show whether a model has. i'm the american, french or german by the and was concerned with the full say what am i able to say, presenting itself with that? it would be interesting to do a comparative study between chat g,
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p t and bloomed chat wouldn't have to present this if you ask a question in different languages. how different are the answers depending on the kind of question. so could you do is the approach more american or european so that would be an interesting study success as content i saw, the assignment you they'll see it looks good on these nevada. so difficult when i talk about liberalism of values. i mean that every population in the world has its own value system, one that i think we have a lot of different nationalities here. and we have to ask ourselves, but what are our values, phone to what's important to us, the ultimate x box, and you're like, you're started germany less of size already. i would say it'd be player in you case diabetes, or just the very visible player here in your, in friends. and this is trial is new player if and also in the,
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in the almost every open country is us. yet this one all to like, stand up with this. uh, yes, i'm vision to become until to build something big smith as idealistic as thomas and his team from hugging face appear. there's also criticism open sol, so know the end result is that a small release of tech professionals is determining what elf future looks like, and what risks will expose to 20 business bunkers. welcome and use it. before fall, the business people i need to say we need education is, society has to educate it. so we only create the system could or you could design those systems in different ways. for example, you can make it so that a person can understand what's going on. so at least a little because this could be one of the obligations we impose on the industry that we'd love to do. do do a show cooper, then it was obviously, as i said, this of the machine could you, i like, you know, these are these machines and price. how to control knowledge in the i'm
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a created by mathematicians who don't know anything about culturally i didn't. what's a bit of an exaggeration? of course, that isn't what we have to find ways of explaining this to people who aren't interested in the math. phase one up, they just use the machines as tools, you need 6. they need to understand where the limits on quickly can with the situations or machine, well or one truck we must consume. i'd just like with t p. s. devices. yes. before we recognize when they give us the wrong route shipments, you'd be hesitant to sweep up a this isn't a great, that's a huge percentage deal is opening up some service. you know, the, there's also a huge call opening on who's actually responsible me. and so how do you, because as a developer or researcher, you have a certain responsibility. it's not about restricting research conflict, but when the applications that are harmful to society, we have to be aware of bathrooms. so in the 1st ship it yeah, and put that there was a huge potential for manipulation. just to think of the influence of track g,
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p t on the election is probably not. i think there needs to be an answer though, and it's just more education symbols. that's a good topic for the upcoming election. so what education do we need to stop us being manipulated due to the same type goals costume, because best 2 companies will come on. that's a big question. what happens when people start asking i who they should vote for? because the i all, i will give them an answer as to as task and the goals. who decides how it's on says yeah, who should decide that the box right? unfortunately, i have no answer to the other people's, but my processor generally is developing a breathtaking speech and take julian's, the best thing is out in the ring. that's spearing development even more. is a massive new market up for grabs. leading i expect it's more, it's a big tig and it's egan is to compete,
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is creation technologies beyond the control. i think we've made a mistake when my sweetest country man, uh carl funnel in a us brand that our species is homeless. sapient sapiens means of thinking, homo, the, the smart one i, we're not going to be the smartest anymore. maybe we should rerun ourselves to homeless sentence. the feeling human wisdom field tour ya city, meaning purpose love. that is what really makes us unique. the wasn't ask, how can we keep the control over the machines so that we can using the tools to build the world or wherever we can really have human flourishing when positive experiences the in 2014. when i found that the future life has appeared,
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it was quite tebow to even talk about a safety at all. because that would imply that it wasn't covered because it's, and a lot of researchers thought that would be bad for funding. and the only weird people worried about this it was very much like coming out of the closet moments to be able to sign this letter and say, oh you too are words, technician slow down a little bit. oh, i didn't know that. and then it suddenly became become socially acceptable. max, take mock and he, st. charles life institute, published an open letter warning, the artificial intelligence post and ex essential change it to humanity. civilization itself could be under the thresh the letter was signed by hundreds of ivory searches and take industry latest,
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including test to the boss and x not even mosque apple co founder, steve wozniak and touring award winner. joshua been g o. m. it's been quite shocking that once we put this letter out and i'm kind of a who is who of a i research assigned that. and the conversations really exploded might cause significant. we've field the technology industry cost significant harm to the world. i think that happened a lot different ways. it's why we started at the company. i think if this technology goes wrong, it can go quite wrong. and we want to be vocal about that. we want to work with the government. i think he was serious about that a, i think that's a kind of so he wasn't able to speak central risks and i also believe there are
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potential risks there also a whole spectrum of other risks and i know some, i talk to him a couple of times about this, you know, she very much recognizes them as well. on the one hand, of course, of these warnings about the major power of this new technology also amplify the significance of the products that these people are building. so it could also have an in direct marketing effect, right? like look at the incredible things that we're building. but also let's make sure that nothing goes wrong. and for that they look to the politicians. the net effect of us could be that if heaven forbid something goes wrong, they could say, well, we warn you, but the politicians did not act or they did not act in time. so i'm looking at a paper here and title large language models trained on media diets can predict public opinion. this is just posted about a month ago. this work was done at mit and then also it at google. the conclusion is that large language models can indeed predict public opinion. i'm,
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i wanna think about this in the context of elections. should we be concerned about models that can learn the language models that can predict a survey opinion and then can help organizations into these find 2 strategies to elicit behaviors from voters? should we be worried about this for our elections? yeah, i think senator holly for the question is, it's one of my areas of greatest concern that the more general ability of these models to manipulate, to persuade, and to provide sort of one on one, you know, interactive, this information. i'm nervous about it. i think people are able to adapt to quite quickly when photoshop came onto the scene a long time ago. you know, for awhile people were really quite fooled by photoshop images and then pretty quickly developed an understanding that images might be photo shopped. this will be like that, but on steroids and the, the interactivity on the ability to really model predict humans. well, as he talked about, i think is going to require
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a combination of company is doing the right thing, regulation and public education. the 2024 is the crucial election year. not only in the united states, but world wide, there will be european parliament's elections. there will be elections in india. i mean, it's a large amount of people in the world will actually go to the polls. and while we're living in this big experiment where it's very hard for independence, researchers, journalist, civil society organizations to pro these models that we may only find out, you know, what the, what the harms and, and malign uses as a weapon against democracy were when it is too late, a spirit. shortly off to some old men at p before the us senate, he co signed
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a statement along with a number of high ranking executives from google, microsoft and other tech companies. the fact that it was the companies who themselves were asking for this type of regulation, going to be the leading researchers who were asking for the government to get involved. that really was the turning point in the conversation to understand the effect, the generosity of a i was having behind the scenes of global politics at the time. you have to travel to a small swedish city called lou la, around a $150.00 columbus itself. of the arctic circle when people say that artificial intelligence is going to be like the next industrial revolution. i think they're
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under estimating its impact. it's not just going to be a new technology like the steam engine. it's like building a new species. especially if it's much smaller than us. president vipers himself was having meetings on artificial intelligence, in some cases, as often as 3 times per week. and i will tell you that not very many things get on the president's calendar for 3 times a week. may. so he says $20.00 to $20.00 to $3.00. the sirens and most of kate's defending on the swedish coastal c. c gave a sense of how much was at stake. lead is came here to discuss nothing less than the house humanity should react to the arrival of this new b is also official full of intelligence. what role she politicians play, democracy needs to show that we are as fast as technology you. so the 1st and that's a on an ascii flagpole. so 6 months you, so yesterday, a number of very,
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very insightful people signing up to say you need to do something for the very extra central risks. and then you have them non existent, your risk as well. why it's important for the european union to have a common policy with the us concerning a i, and should in other parts of the globe be included in the conversation. your vision important, but this is bigger than your us as important. but it is because i'm the us, but it's the 2 of us take the leads with close friends. i think we can push something that will make us hold much more comfortable with the fact that in order to have a i is now in the world. and is developing at amazing speeds you understand rulers was also invited to the top level meeting in sweden to represent
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the views of you repeat and i stuff ups and cold food competition entries. another code you have the name on a robot. you can, of course, there are other ai companies in europe in this, but we're the one that's keeping pace the most with the global leaders always that i assume that's the reason why we're here. not because we're so charming. and so someone's that just trying to change coming in some industry, how do you feel about that? we can raise more capital. yeah, i think we have to 2 weeks ago i was at the set fi conference as a piece of fi conference and custom klein on these opening keynote. he kind of said our key partners. fortunately, they are all of all 5 google and microsoft, you know, and then file past events coming up with, with the, with antonio neary. what are you think about the,
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the are calling some of your other i'm here from. and so i'll fix it right and latest of statements, etc. oh, these are the, the statements on like safety or yeah, they're like you, yesterday and so on. it's long term. it is possible to conceive catastrophic events . i've had brussels and bird and they basically are, are scared we will start with the units on the list for the founder and ceo of out of alpha before is yours and thank you very much for being with us today. all right, thanks for having me. i think we're all like a little bit dizzy. the speed of change, like everybody, i know that is in the eyes kind of stressed out. and with this technology, we're only even just stretching the surface. i fear that knowledge work is an
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important part of what is happening in europe. so this is a, an opportunity for us to, to build you empires to build new value. but it's also a risk that we're losing a substantial pillar that we're standing on. thinking about how we can, how we can make this a fair playing field, because i think it's in everybody's interest that you're up. we'll continue to a safer future in a i, to me while the us in a you were trying to come up with a common strategy on the other side of the world in china, an artificial intelligence ecosystems emerging with its own set of rules. a high is a key part of china is if it's to become a global power. i always remember my mom and my dad push me in for this all the big school,
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the older folk gad specialize in mathematics and also english school as like a extra work size. it's a regular schoolwork. so basically you have to take the lessons on saturday. we tend, it makes me a quick learner and then my mom is correct, right? so in order to keep per grassy older, don't keep pushing yourself. you'll have to keep learning. and i always, i always tell my i'm so used also to keep learning, to keep up this fast paced my father was a for pfizer in coming to science. so i, i'm very lucky to get in touch with a guy in the very early days back in 2009 i was trying to use um, a uh model is very simple. yeah. models nowadays, if you look from today's large language model perspective, that model is like a very simple, simple, like a small end. i had show has worked
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in both the east and west. he sell positions that the chinese tech joined 10 cent and gym and online retailer salanda. 3 years ago he found that his own company, gina is an i. i stuff help with offices, insurance and, and beijing. but its headquarters are in berlin. oh, where the another interview here. why? yes, for the website, for the license which have the prism insurance and now this was also like employees experience so people can see how it is to work a gina? yes, not only for me. i need to respect. yes, i see. i see the telling me of course so from india, isabella from salts? yeah, from south africa. i lived in from felicia. right. jack moved from malaysia. michelle finally from germany. so they're supposed to be showing the progress of training the model. it's kind of like the stock market, right?
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i see this model performs relatively good because you can see is increasing over time. but sometimes it's not very successful. for example, this one, this model will start very high by that the program is kind of stuff that is wasting our time is wasting to fewer resources energy. and so i hadn't shown his team a working on optimizing i models for specific applications. for example, linking text, video, and images. the goal is to make communication between humans and machines, more intuitive and natural. a lot of people may recognize this, this guy is, this is a, this is the kind of grandpa me, right? so it's very popular on social media, right? so if you don't know this picture to the algorithm, it will generate how a storage you can generate a comedy and you're all take, offend us, the horrible, all of this kind of story. so we just keep it default and then we just do. it
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wasn't supposed to be like this. i was meant for more. he whispered to the room, his words echoing into silence. i am more than the lonely man i've become. more than these disappointments, suddenly his eyes glinted a revelation, farming within his might. or perhaps it is time i show the world that again, with strength and resolve, arthur placed the coffee down, marking into a solitary reflection and the beginning of a new chapter. so um, basically this is what you can do a way to push multi model in twice during price. so you'd have to see if i'm a single image, you are able to generate not only a text description, but an emotional audio story. the
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eventually chinese company will be in the medium position in this generation of a i. 2 months ago i was, i think that the end team, this was a i congress in shanghai. and during the conference, there was a certain, the large language models are released in on one day. some found big companies like 10 sonata by, by do some also from like a middle sized companies from different industry even right now, for example, if i'm back let's try is coming. yeah. you are the american good at learning from us. come right. so they kind of copycat, what us company are doing and then make it even better. i don't doubt that one day, you're well say, wow, as a top models in the benchmarks in the leaderboard actually from china. the question of which companies will terminate the age of artificial intelligence
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has real geo political consequences. china is using the expertise of its tech companies to expand its power wisdom nations. meanwhile, a trying to count to this the . my name is jeffrey king. i was a long time journalist and foreign correspondent in china. i wrote a book called the perfect police state, and i was an advisor to the us congress to the house of representatives on sanctions and chinese politics. from what i have seen around the world in china and elsewhere, i am deeply concerned that we do not know how to manage a i yet we do not know what's come in. we do not know how to rein in this technology and put it to the good use of our democracy. china has been leading in bringing technology under state control. and in fact,
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using it as an instrument for state power, whether it is for internal control and censorship, and grip on society, or whether it is their global ambition to have digital infrastructure around the world and to work with or countries. for example, i think about the african continent. it is, of course, a vision that is at direct odds with that of democratic societies. in 2017 china is national strategy for artificial intelligence. and this is a public document set out the explicit goal of dominating global technology. and so i think united states has explicitly set the goal that we are not going to assist china in rising as an a i enabled of authoritarian super. now i want to key in the past, it's be not u. s. companies that have online the government's policies in order to gain access
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to the massive chinese markets. foremost among them, microsoft, microsoft is the most pivotal edit for each western company. operating in china that has helped the chinese government develop. it's a i this toby, a microsoft set up in office and in china called microsoft research asia. this was a gesture from bill gates back in the 1990 because he wanted to guarantee stronger market access to china. this laboratory has gone on to train the who's, who lists the superstars of the trainings, artificial intelligence world. many of the key people in this laboratory have gone on to found companies such as make the sense time or either either found them or they've taken on very senior roles. and then that was like the thing to base or off the, the more to try to use things are not all
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a and that's a lot of great people. great researchers start off longer is actually come from microsoft research as those tenants i've not become you and kind of the very, very big influence or is opinion leaders and very like in temper new york in china, microsoft helped build china's take late. this in turn, has been used by the chinese government to create a gigantic surveillance stage that operates with the help of a i live in china and basie. i shouldn't have found the most recent tv camera in the, in the work i saw. and the to be honest, like the general probably get to use. so they don't see this as intrusion to their own fibers or heavy or software that idolize their behavior. or, you know, because the kind of the narrative there was to protect it makes us society more
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secure, provided about protect from terraces to and so on. so in general, like the public over the last to years has already accepted the fact that their us or media right now we have like over $500.00 city, we're in across the country. that means was city. it's just like some high, they have a lot of big data analysis into the collecting all this data from different areas and they have the machine, they have the light, centralize it, and, and do the computation analysis and making all these decisions. the chinese government has use all forms of a i so far they see a, a is an extremely powerful tool that they can use for, for the military,
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for national security, for succeed surveillance, police work also the management of cities. traffic may have been selling these same technologies all over the world, especially to authoritarian governments with the promise of total surveillance and a nation free of crime. free of this. it is, it's a brand new world because we have not yet found a solution to this in the west. the china is 14, you hate, the us is pursuing its own interests. and the e. u. is striving for independence. europeans don't play a pause in shaping this future technology, then it will be american or chinese that will penetration our lives to an unprecedented extent. it will know us, as well as our closest friends and relatives, it will communicate with this around the clock. an influence of thoughts and
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actions to prevent these c e u needs companies that cannot finally program, but also build their own hardware infrastructure to keep highly sensitive, don't feel safe. a training high and a language models requires thousands of high performance graphics costs, which is also why supplies escapes. that's another reason why many smaller players allies themselves with launch tech companies can see the funding use in both eyes kind of difficult either. let's move on a lot of the deals in the field of gender to they are in recent months have come at the cost of independence. many companies have partnered with large corporations by accepting restrictions on things like hardware selection via cloud selection by
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integration. i think we absolutely didn't want to do that or the slot and so i'm gonna give you off kind from the homework early on, you understand jewelers recognize the value of having one's own hardwick. he built a dash, a cent of his company in germany. for that reason i left alpha is becoming increasingly strategically important for politicians. the been in the media, the media talks about you is germany's answer to chat g p t. so is that right? is this 5 and i thought of i was again to do it. i go to hoped me that's wrong. that's in front of you could say, germany's answer to open a, i would do it by chat g b t is a product aimed at the consumers. them, it gets really intended to help school kids do their homework or to write a poem for grandma's birthday and things like that. but that's not our target group
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at all. and thoughts we want to go. we're the most complex and critical processes are, for example, in the financial industry, the in administration type and security and health care. that's where we want to build systems that assessment and support that people often. but i mean is kill you . we are in the government ministry here have, i'm public administration could benefit enormously from a i don't think we have an incredible number of processes that can be system a ties and carried out. they've just happened. my not so the focus of my work here . it was a bit like asking, how is it public sector could act as a means the consumer and generating work if you complete it like that above which will create demand for german and european, the technology can cause the men's. and i don't, i mean, i mean if i don't is any i company that target, so public sector and we are the public sector. so we only have to see that we generate opportunities for these technologies to be tested and be it through customer experience funding decisions or even permits the,
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the dallas i sent it so far and showed out of office independence comes from us company shoot, i could enterprise to do is pick up the enterprise this, i know that loose nukes a of hewlett packard enterprise is one of the biggest players. when it comes to setting up computer infrastructure, the, they build data centers, they set up internal server rooms ols. so is it a lot of the high quality infrastructure in which the modern world runs comes from h. b and jewelers secured a strategic partnership with h p, giving him access to hardware without tying him to the company exclusively fuel. so hope that would help him gain
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a foothold then the u. s. market. the finalize the deal in las vegas with h. p. c of antonio, nanny. the analysis. know it's a business. we're announcing a major joint project with h. b, e. today, they'll be a press release going outside multimedia, so it might not like it'll be a big joint market venture to get a boost. that's the important thing. that's not that i'm going to go on a stage with them, but that we're now taking a joint step with a major partner and a booth and my nervous. yeah, maybe a little dominated. we've been working towards this for months. i'm sure it'll go well. so i mean we, we, we're building off on that,
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we have an independent taxi tax and we not relying when any, an external dependencies we recently saw explain ability to new ways. so you cannot totally seem positively confirming sources about those disagreeing stories that is shared with me an example. yeah, exactly right. how from your own kind of speech, something business there, i'm always here. so because while of the condos in the native americans move fast, what it is they're willing to take risks these apart. but of course, this partnership also has to benefit h b, e. u to pop at any partnership can come to an end at any time. the units and julie just wanted to avoid becoming dependent on the launch corporation as was open i at microsoft, that strategy brought with the 2 major risk. if he's technology doesn't keep up with the competition. he'll be out of the right. so we'll have more money soon.
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yeah, thanks i, i also wanna. 1 hoping that yesterday helped a little bit with that like oh it's yeah, it certainly didn't, didn't it didn't hurt to and i've got so kind of feedback from the immediate feedback i after the show think from, from investors on my, on my cell saying, i don't wanna i wanna kind of put this money to work. yeah. um, so i think i think if we can get your help and if you've got, if we get to your help to really say, okay, these are the, the application you cases and hey, we can get that list you know from, from you. and then we can turn around and look at, okay, one, how do we package it to how do we, you know, can we use it internally? yes. i think that would be great. you know? and then and then obviously 3, how do we know, how do we make sure we line up the services offer? thanks again for the partnership grades. the thanks a lot. i think what always attracted us to the relationship was our office mission was to enable enterprise application use cases for for our allowance and multi
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modal models. and most of the customers in the valley are most of the companies in silicon valley were much more consumer oriented. so this concept of a single tenant lamp that can be trained with your data for your application really fits our core customer base. for over a friend in us, andrew, this new, the americans wanted to see concrete results he had to deliver. and foster the show i have smiled for you. what interests are you happy with the traits here so far? the spins and so please feel that meant for me. comments all by one following the display. must be most interesting. that's an input attempt. this fitness page busy
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position movies adviser on the some of the cut film, social mens on top of the b i. race is also a competition for attention. it's about catchy me. i have invest, it's sitting on panels. be noticed, being quoted, the or the design around them was already heard from the few most lines on this topic today from there were still a few more to come on. so if i give you this will be asking to what extent dial itself and dr. innovation, perfect, and what's on it. and so this once nation technology is now the subject of massive hot, you're in a central just suddenly in the spotlight. he's
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a guy is being tested, isn't evaluated. norful ways favorably use magazine did size accused of of, of allowing it say hi to be provoked into making racist and chauvinistic statements . and truly pointed out, just basic technology has deliberately not him restricted low hanging fruit fish on this happens at just low hanging fruit or journalists. i took a screenshot as find the model, use the bad word instructs every time i find 2 in the model or 2 in the instruction i the test that diminishes it in certain areas. this is for the fees card, it loses capabilities in exchange for me, making it more pleasant or safer. and those might be the exact capabilities that i need in an industrial context for automating processes. the
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you know, we want the embedding technology to become a well known brand, just like the iphone. that's the most important thing. don't think about whether it makes sense or not. the old way, i don't know. there's a big bed. we want to become a company like opening on the top provider in the embedding world in that i was talking to him about the upcoming plan because we, i believe to release of a new product which is uh, kind of a competitor to a whole the i uh, in value, uh, platform and uh, so we were just uh, kind of these costs. what are the, the best way to kind of push the people focused on this product, right? because there is also like to know where the web t with different culture bank was. and uh,
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sometimes it's very hard to what kind of off nice everybody to concentrate on one suit. this is also because a guy is developing so fast on the law of high. so if you're there and people and you don't want to try this all for me to try that all. so i just the top 2 by say to you on make sure that all they see here. i mean you're a senior leaders are kind of on the same page. we have kind of the developer driven company. so most of our customers are user is actually developers a software engineers. so if he's on board right now, there's a, there, there is a time and don't think he was there. right. and their engineering team is also our customer. the biggest challenge as see is a combination and i, i just tween tends to the investor and i'll still be like a most of the investment especially, wasn't uncomfortable, right? or wrong investor has a very strict the evaluation about this company. so the companies are, we are competing ways such as, you know, how getting phase from, from us and the co here from us. so those come, yeah, not like
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a those guy. you know, previously we're kind of google, you know, our graduated from, i meant to use stanford. so that very smart people, the most of the investors, well look at as, as not as a small company, but they will evaluate us with more knowledge based on the hype, but they're based on the performance of the company. right? so that's, that means we own we, we have to show to sales be there is a hyper gross off the user. so when you to grow as a user base a super fast, or we show that by salt lake to revenue news summer 2023. thomas wolf has managed to make time for a family vacation in brittany france is chief scientific officer. he's primarily responsible for research and development housing face a job that allows him to take a break from time to time. take
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a look. what are you up to today? anything special specific? no, we're practicing sealing with the trapeze. i bet you do the has today onto those you so yes, today we'll do something else. more in the classroom. they also sell. meanwhile, thomas's business partner, clement alone, is in the spotlight. he's the ceo of hugging face, the public face of the company, tech industry heavy weights like google, amazon and video, and a. m. d. have invested $235000000.00 into hugging face. the opened development platform for i models has become a $1000000000.00 business the, the company gains even more prestige with mach sucker books. meza used talking face to publish its high and language model,
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lama to say on some of the stuff to you to some of a it's a model that was recently published by facebook and methods. if it could simulate the chat, g p t, an open source competitor, i'll tree. the difference is that it's free. it's only because you can just install it on your computer. i don't know, you don't have to access it through the chat gtm device or pay for it. it's like a set of lego. everything is open to the next. everything is freely accessible and will take. you can also buy it a pre built. if someone builds an open source model for you, i believe it's long in that building like, oh, if you fail to get a beautiful sports. com, like from like a preventative and then it's yours that fit. you can open up a hood and look inside it. it leaves reserve level gal they've, they won't see the greatest advantage of open source. it's free, it's disability. it's also its greatest weakness. what is the model was developed further by criminals, terrorists or other bad actors and use to cause tom?
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any security mechanisms built into a language model can easily be removed. the single worst case to i can say. so that's a big question. we're asking ourselves and how getting face on in the beginning. all right, was to make this technology is one the excessive as possible. and you all know we sold it would help lots of developers that there were 2 sides to the technology because there were some people who can access it. we really shouldn't be able to accept this on, but that the so there was a guy i met last year who had an a i designed to develop medicines, molecules that are good for your health, just as an experiment to put in the minus sign and train to look for molecules were bad for your health, and within 4 hours it discovered a thousands of chemical weapons including the x,
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the most powerful nerve gas that we have here in the us. i have developed, you know, so of course you shouldn't open source things like that. it's just crazy. i'm a scientist. i love open source, right? and it's a library. if you think about the pace of progress, how do you make sure that there is like the most progress open source is your friend? having said that, i just cannot completely ignore all the dangers. and of course, the argument, the only argument i have seen so far from supporters of open sourcing everything you think, well, we will figure it out since he 1st seen the rest is so quick a on cool multiple. it's easy to comment from the sideline, was assisting people in that it's dangerous, as they own it's more difficult to actively get involved, to try to create something positive on something good. people necessarily be successful, say they'll be mistakes and then fresh attempts additional. i'm going to try it's risk, you know, the little some of the pos we think is right. uh, i'm gonna do like some of the sequences. the
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mit is one of the most renowned tech universities in the world. it has close ties to industry. research carried out here has the potential to change the world. needless to say, m i t is at the forefront of artificial intelligence in addition to his work, but the future of life institution max, take mark is a professor here. the topic of i security is part of his day today. so we want to wrap up the effort piece of which we do things. and, and it's also very inspiring whenever i go to silicon valley and meet with various companies, they, how quickly they do things often compared to what we do in universities. so totally fund this, depending on we have a whole, we're lucky to have
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a whole bunch 7 of townsend people here. so we can, we can wrap up take mock and his fellow campaign is want to keep a close eye on the tech stash ups from silicon valley. uncover risk. and you saw an typic methodology to show people just town full time. we have left to counteract the pool of the tech industry. so you've been working very hard and finishing your paper and you have a very, very long conversation. now yesterday, and i thought i thought the very last part of it of what we talked about might be kind of fun for the whole group. yeah. i, i completely agree. i do want to draw that table. uh, yeah. where's internet be vacant for the quotes for it? so like we basically as you know, the model, the conflict between like the movement to replace human livelihoods and maybe replace humans period. uh, versus like the movement to resist this and to preserve the status quote. so this
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doesn't, this come, it's not just something peter pulled out of a half. it just actually comes from the math. so if you're not, he's like, oh, we have a guy that can do everything human can do, but better. uh my life will still be good, so we called at night to to uh so, so if a lot of people believe this, then they will not invest personal sacrifices and personal costs to greater unite and not for the move it to be in a better position to resist as a team, there's um, companies, an open source developers that are working day and night with the goal of, you know, taking people's income streams by creating and models that are better than them at the, their job and their capabilities. so once you lose your income streams on your leverage, like it's too late, but your options are more limited. so suddenly he's plus he thought it the biggest thing john told y'all just to will look back in 20. yes. and realize that we've ultimate to the everything this was because it was so easy to find because it worked and the i all i behaved correctly. a 99 percent of the cases approval and then suddenly we no longer have control over something that's crucial for society.
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done for that specific the, the process has already begun. until now it's getting the intellectual and creative abilities if she and instead of set us apart from all the creatures and machines. but what is those qualities? and now being taken away, the, my name is dr. a non goal number kasanya o a k, a sam s i am a rapper. i'm a producer, and i'm an assistant professor at brown university of music department. initially, i wasn't sort of tapped into all of the discussions that were happening around a i, of course, peripherally. i was sort of listening watching reading. but i,
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i really started to tap into these conversations when i noticed what was happening at the intersection of hip hop in a i. and that's when i realized, well, this thing is moving really quickly. i mean, last year we were talking about a sort of a i generated wrapper, and this year we're talking about wrappers like drake and harvest, like the weekend having their voice is actually sort of cloned using ai technologies. and so the, the speed at which this has become sort of an immediate challenge for working artist is very alarming, ultimately is the logic of capitalism. and as a human creator, what you can do is try not to be left behind. as a chinese, we always view that light a technology. if you use it in this model way, it can like push you uplift you yourself to become a smarter equator. quit creates or you know, a machine and a,
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i could do the job faster, a cheaper and they don't have strike. and, you know, they, they'll reduced and the light re ridiculous. the mom phoned it, finds all from the bosses. and i can see the chinese companies already like using it to replace human neighbors. so i think this is very critical moment right now for the creators around the world. so this is something happening and it's gonna be big in the next 3 to 5 years. and so for folks like myself who, you know, i've, i've been able to build a life for myself, but i would definitely not say that i'm in the, the sort of like top tier to that music industry. there's a way that i think we're able to skirt under the radar and continue doing work as we're doing it because it's so much about experimentation. it's so much about
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trying out weird things. and a guy is so much about average a, if the people who are invested in play in that space of the anomaly and playing with the unexpected who will sort of continue to thrive the the impact of auto official intelligence. and our society is file reaching and complex. how can we regulate to technology that's developing so quickly and who's potential is almost impossible to gauge? the united states is struggling here in washington. the tech industries influence is huge. company majorities upfront job. the fax with the matter is that the us government move slowly. it is a democracy. that's that slowness is built into the system. the us government is
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not supposed to be efficient and not supposed to be able to tackle problems quickly . because a government that is too efficient, you know, can use that against its own citizens to i think that we've now reached a stage in our society that many philosophers and writers in the 20th century war and about which is the inability to govern technology due to the increasing pace of change well i, i certainly would not that against democracies, but it will be a really tough adjustment period. the 1st major piece of legislation and regulations, artificial intelligence on a file reaching scale came from the e u. b. i act i definitely kind of really admired european union for being essentially the during the space they took on this kind of regulation very seriously before anyone else refer seriously or
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unison trueness has come to brussels together with other stuff, shop founders. he wants to let politicians know that strong regulation could put smaller. you repeat employers at a disadvantage compared to the competition in the us and china is $85.00. so the movie seems to use a meetings like this are always a bit difficult because you say your piece and you never really know what reaction you're going to get a few new people with list of these. and of course, it's clear that cooperation within europe and with europe is important, but it's always hard to say how much we can achieve here in now a. ready
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ready job documents, shedra, that's kind of the life of creating. i could just talk and i was repaired, something like this. it's your sessions and you can decide where you want to sit. no. so good afternoon to all of you. i least welcome to today. it'll be environment conducive meeting. an important meeting at the right time is something that will happen. and we always see like basically a few steps down the road. is there what's like the cloud like the and the hyper
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scale. those have done with, with cloud computing, that will be an infrastructure for genuine intelligence that all the value creation, all the apps, all the new innovations in the world will build upon. and for, for us, there will be no 2nd chance. if we cannot move fast, then we, we won't be able to try again in 12 months. thanks a lot. the andrew, this is repeated his message over and over again with their own international stages to jim and politicians or here at the european parliament or is it the cost of the networking and lobbying has become 2nd nature to him. ringback as we have
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money to it, you have a as an investment. so i started my career as an investment banker in management consultant wearing a suit and 38 degree weather with no air conditioning. the . ringback the distribution i don't think i'd make a good politician. i realize that in my days, at apple vehicles, this deal for expressions kind of what's the probability of success. one is, is it worth investing this time? is it worth fighting this battle? i think so. i think it's a battle worth fighting, but i also have moments when i think that doing something else would be pretty nice of some ongoing concern. ringback ringback ringback
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it shortly after his meeting with the european parliament it passed to act the federal even 5 years down. the line as it is just a government structure that will give you the ability to deal with the rapid evolution of the i n 3. pick the most benefits from it, and we have work 1st and foremost, we sure all citizens rights and freedoms. i'm not just respected, but protected and expensive. we don't want to match the values. we don't want social scoring, we don't want predictive policing. and there, can you post on the news that i most know i can't remember we have been following are presenting very new group liberals because you can parliament them and judge my profession. i was also a member of government in romania, minnesota, visualization. these have interior prior to coming to parliament. hey,
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i will play very much into the pol balance. why? because it drives our economies, but not only becomes those would you believe affect both in terms of how well phase going to look like. and then also how this technology will play into many of the processes that will keep one part of the world or the other competitive. and therefore, also the way you write the standards and how those standards become global acceptance standards is very important in that all balanced admission early. so we're going to see very soon also, i think a competition will cost a little flash in terms of global standards. and that is why we have to take measures to protect our interests and also to make sure that again, our understanding of the role of technology is one that is shared by as many on the global citizen and read negotiations, germany, france, and it's lean low, begin to soften the rules of the i it, to protect domestic players like alice alpha from heavy regulation. but in the end,
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the european parliament prevailed. the mass interest you vehicle, you're, i'm gauge in terms of regulation, we're the economy of this leading the way for benign. there's a concern that will take too much creativity. i sent the market to to you to austin, mark as well. so in europe, we're best for a regulation that preaching technology on the market. unfortunately not. and the truth is, it's ultimately going to be good for the tech industry as well. to be regulated level playing field. even seat belts and cars were viciously opposed by the auto industry at 1st. but not then when we got the last thing, all cars have to have seat belts. they started to sell much more cars. mm
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. we had sho, has travel sessions in order to keep his team on the same page. the ceo has to visit the various company offices, regulate the, the, those red letters, all the, all the beauty is that, is that basically our office about so well now the big, where does the was mobile, the size of the big building. he wants to take his company, gina, to the next level that will require all his employees to pull to get as much as possible on this is i'll just put this down
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and finalize our name. brought some levels instead of like items are delicious. no . so the value, i'm not sure if i'm good. oh sure. i told them you have to each know as i make a heavy face to the cover of the flower head, germany, people's great healing each other, like a telling jokes a you know, tons of random stuff a football match yesterday or this kind of thing here. a small introvert, i think the in the office this morning traverse, it's just the i can see for a working cultures. both of them are pretty productive. under my we are in the start out. everything was very quickly is that when it becomes a little bit stress, what becomes on live at numbers, because, you know,
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we couldn't use that as long pages against the other competitors against the market as it's not about. so what we need is about how people perceive us right on, on what we need. in the meanwhile, in germany is it is also a team, a working on releasing a new large mentioned models. and yesterday, the leaders told me that today's model can be ready on monday, but it has been postponed for many, many times. so i have to see like a colleagues those in the evening and show has another meeting with a potential investor on the way he calls his technical director. to ask was the launch of the new language model is going as planned. i have on the way, but you know, the number then it's a one, not publisher bure embedding platform has to get into the global best model. there
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are no police company won't succeed unless everyone does their best to know my heart and all part in similar. thomas, is there any, is there guns or if you don't get into the top 10, it will be much more difficult to say you use a platform that's not in the top 10, then you're going to be able to accomplish it. or you just need to, since you the total, you need to think more about these practical things to manage on that. how does the linkedin post done the twitter post? that is all there needs to be a strategy here. so they are about so uh huh. okay, well that's fine by a while the little guy didn't to the top 10 model, a leaderboard armada is getting to the top to but you know, the team just told me the german team just told me they probably cannot get into that helped him. that's why i got a little bit like a bill in his, on my, on my conversation. because that, sir,
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this is something that we promised to ourselves. you know, is this word is very, very occasion based word. and if you can knock guys into the top 10, it's just like a, even if you'll get into like november 11th, right? nobody cares surprised. so this is why, you know, i'm telling the team that it's not about engineering, at least you also have to sing about the whole company like the marketing sales. that all depends on the number 10 to top 10 models of this lead up on the
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right. notice hi, grace. hi. grace lou works for chinese investment bank. the 2 1st met a couple of years ago during the star shop phase of hon. charles company, a sill phone thing. and you were just starting to bring a i generated content to people, right. so you don't want high them on how to do those multi modal a i do not, i think we're working on 2 things right now. no one is prompting technology and the other is embedding technology dining, which is me to say thursday this year will be quite a challenge for you and i, for the whole of it's only gonna run, you know, we've made a new software with prompt, perfect one of getting the developers part, we've already got 200000 registered users and say, oh boy, you are so long. oh,
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that means there's a lot of demand and full amount or i don't think i kind of jumped to my conclusion yet. the commission is something very interesting to me about case new thing about the tool, new products, actually the most and cause and see if the c o. okay, myself. right? and by that he is a good entry premier and not only assigned seats to all a good developer meetings like this one, put opportunities on the table for her and shows company both in china and in the west. and there's good news about who's important project when you develop a tool performs just as well as the equivalent technology from open i the, by the end of 2023 units, andrew says plenty to celebrate. he's completed a major around the financing. the company prevailed and convinced enough investors
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to raise half a $1000000000.00. that's money. and truly this is going to need because competitor open i is over the triggering a new phase in the race for a dominance. the we did a lot of things that smaller people told me 4 years ago they would be impossible. built deep tech, i already out of germany. impossible fun this with mostly european capital impossible. build our own data center. impossible. continued category, defining research, impossible. and now we're entering into a new era and of super happy to have you all with us. and thanks for being here and help us make this the best part either titled because of us
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man. and for thomas wolf, quiet holidays may soon be a sing if the post talking face is now the huge $4500000000.00. thanks to successful style shops and the i act, the you at least has a seat at the table alongside the you with some china. for now, for humanity at large. the question remains, what kind of world that we building right now for ourselves and for our children? i was holding a little baby leo, you know, we just turn 9 months old and looking into his eyes and fixing video right now. his language abilities are much worse than chuck gp 4 and he's never going to catch up . but i ever have 2 kids that are in middle school and i'm thinking that cable,
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that's what i should teach them about. so they kind of prepared for the a if use future, how do we teach our kids to kind of build something like unique and individual? the machine is all something. it's all the bar, the sort of sisters. so we're working together. so i think that's that's how i feel the mendoza value of shocking. yeah. that they'll sit dahlia's complicated. even in these pivotal moments in these complex times, people always find a way the creative and resourceful on this uh, my son is already learning to colored. yeah, he's really interested in, i was, he wants to understand things and create things using i see our children will probably create to well, that's completely different from us. i just but i'm not for 8. the end of the day. i'm an optimist suite. 2 pulse of the
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the
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shift your guide to life and it did to, to you know, all the latest online trend, navigate your way through the digital jungle global perspective. we'll be your guide and show you what's possible. you decide what really message to you shift in 15 minutes on the w pablo. picasso redefined european fine art button. where did creative inspiration
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come from the place of his birth? perhaps malec a search to find out that made copies of the cost though, take the or 30 minutes d w industrial should be enough for song even though it was all them getting involved. protecting the goodness i think is a shift base. my now phone is s o n c c a is the gotten into one i cannot sheets, we need to send this off to toby's in 75 minutes on d w. the
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welcome to foot tire time. that's kind of sofas. thanks tourism. what do you get here? you can't get anywhere else in the world. in germany, if you go to a prostitute twice or 3 times as much and the other half the service in 2023, a documentary, uncovered corruption on child abuse. the youngest one, for example, let me show you this was now the film team investigates the was executive has changed the red light, doc shadow, 6 tourism the
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this is dw news life in berlin. at least 32 people are killed in an attack at a popular beach resort in small use capital. police say more than 60 others have been injured installed on a hotel in mogadishu. it's been claimed by our title, east africa affiliate l shabani, violin squares in the is really occupied westbank. several palestinians died in an air strike on a vehicle in a rural area near the northern city of told com. israel says the dead were planning an attack.

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