Chat with Your Own Alien, Video Editing Tools Raise Money, and an AI Law Firm
Tools, apps, and news from around the artificial intelligence world.
Hey y’all!
We’re halfway through the week and I’ve been spending a lot of my time on a new, generative AI experiment on Twitter (I still call it that). Perhaps later I’ll give a rundown of what it is specifically but right now it’s early-innings (but I’m excited by it).
We all have to keep trying new stuff if we want to grow, that’s for sure.
As Nick says, these AI-generated videos are quickly becoming viable films with film quality to boot. Full-length feature film via AI? It’s coming. It might be already here.
OpenAI, Adobe, and Microsoft now support California's AB 3211, which mandates watermarks on AI-generated content. Ewww. Gross.
Viggle raises $19m for its AI video generator. It’s unique for character movement.
Opus is an AI video clip editing tool. Raised $30m. Follow the money.
Supio is an AI platform for law firms. It raised $25m recently.
Yet another conversational AI platform for generative AI agents; raised $2.6 million in seed funding recently.
Scientists from the Universities of Edinburgh and Dundee have a large AI-driven study of over 1.6 million brain scans to develop tools for early dementia prediction. Wow!
Qwen 2 via Hugging Face is a new reasoning model for music, audio, and sound.
The future of patient history? Possibly it’s via artificial intelligence.
Your future best friend? It’s a little alien. Talk with Tolan about anything.
This is way too easy and it works. Too bad it leaves a watermark.
This tool utilizes advanced AI to enhance team calendar management, enabling users to create more time in their day while promoting flexibility and focus in their work environment. It’s called Clockwise.
So, is Grok really better than Midjourney? Here’s a comparison breakdown. The TL;DR: is that MJ is better at life-like images (with content moderation) while Grok offers more creative freedom but has ethical risks. Oh. Whatever.
And that’s it! Have a great rest of your day!
※\(^o^)/※
— Summer
> OpenAI, Adobe, and Microsoft now support California's AB 3211, which mandates watermarks on AI-generated content. Ewww. Gross.
What's gross? (not arguing, asking respectfully) The watermarks are on the content's metadata, not visibly on the images like stock photos have. In addition to allowing platforms to label some images as AI-generated to help curb misinformation, it potentially will make it easier for platforms to pay the actual content creators instead of reposters.