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- Daily Digest: More AI in 2024
Daily Digest: More AI in 2024
PLUS: OpenAI revenue, AI fakes and better meetings.
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Daily Digest #316
Hello folks, Happy New Year! I wonder how many times I’ll say that this week 😅
Now, back to it!
PICKS
OpenAI’s annualized revenue tops $1.6B as customers shrug off CEO drama. Some managers think this could go up to $5B in 2024. At last reported $100B valuation for OpenAI, it’ll have a slightly lower valuation multiple compared to Anthropic.
Camera makers want to watermark human images (not AI ones) - Nikon, Sony, and Canon are creating built-in features to add tamper-proof digital signatures to photos taken by their cameras.🍿Our Summary (also below)
Figma is betting its AI tools can improve meetings and collaboration despite the failed Adobe acquisition. Figma's new AI features like Jambot and FigJam AI aim to make meetings more engaging and productive.🍿Our Summary (also below)
TOP TOOLS
Script it - Build complex AI business workflows that you can reply upon.
Search for ChatGPT - Search your ChatGPT history to find old chats.
Vocabminer - Discover new words in Spanish, and filter the ones you know.
Agent Search by SciPhi - Agent first approach to science and research queries.
Cognite - Open source alternative to create and share chatbots with external knowledge.
OpenCopilot - Add a copilot to your product that can take actions.
Create a game that runs in your browser—all inside ChatGPT.
NEWS
What happened, and what’s coming
Catching up on 2023 with friends from 11 AI startups at NeurIPS.
Stuff we figured out about AI in 2023.
Quick catch-up on best practices for prompt engineering.
Developments and companies to watch in AI video space.
The case for AI agents in 2024—with a database of 60 AI agent products.
Stuff’s getting real
GitHub makes Copilot Chat generally available.
Microsoft’s Copilot app is now available on iOS.
Sourcegraph Cody is now generally available.
Personalized restoration by Snap - Restoring facial images with prior reference to maintain unique facial features.
Open source dataset with 35,000 tokens of text adhering to the New York Times writing style guide.
Lives are changing
When Silicon Valley’s AI warriors came to Washington—how EA $$s are shaping AI policy.
Artificial Intelligence as a time dilator.
AI promises to transform diagnosis of heart disease.
How AI-created fakes are taking business from online influencers.
Japan's 'omotenashi' culture can offer an edge in the AI age.
QUICK BITES
The big camera companies Nikon, Sony, and Canon are working on new tech to add digital signatures to photos. This will help people spot fake AI-generated images.
What is going on here?
Leading camera makers want to find a solid way to tell apart real photos from images edited with AI.
What does this mean?
Deepfakes are getting crazy good these days. It's getting really hard to know what's real anymore. To fight this, Nikon, Sony, and Canon are creating built-in features to add tamper-proof digital signatures to photos taken by their new cameras. These signatures will include key details like when and where the photo was taken, and who took it.
These camera brands have teamed up to make a standard for these digital signatures, that can be checked through a free online tool called Verify. If a photo doesn't have credentials, it flags it as potentially fake.
Sony and AP tested a version of this for journalism-related use cases and Sony is planning to bring the tech to its cameras via a firmware update. Nikon and Canon are planning to release new cameras with similar features.
Why should I care?
Adobe and Google have extensively talked about embedding watermarks and “made by AI” credentials in their AI-generated images. The approach by camera makers is different—adding watermarks to the “real” photos. Things like this might have implications such as only photos with credentials accepted as proofs in courts.
QUICK BITES
Figma is betting its AI tools can improve meetings and collaboration despite the failed Adobe acquisition. Figma's new AI features like Jambot and FigJam AI aim to make meetings more engaging and productive.
What is going on here?
Figma is adding AI to its ideation tool FigJam.
What does this mean?
Adobe was to acquire Figma for $20B. Regulators came in, the deal fell off. But in the past few months, Figma has been aggressively pursuing AI to differentiate itself. It acquired an AI startup called Diagram, held internal hackathons and launched various experimental AI features.
These new tools primarily got added to its product called Figjam—the ideation and collaboration tool. They can now suggest icebreakers, summarize discussions, and rewrite meeting notes. As per Figma, early user response has been very positive, with people embracing the playful creative elements.
Why should I care?
Figma is expanding beyond its core design audience with AI. Two-thirds of its users are now non-designers. The larger selling point now is improved collaboration and ideation, regardless of technical skills. It won’t be surprising to see startups expand into additional tasks around their main offering.
While the community is constantly hacking on “Figma to code” stuff, we haven’t seen much from Figma itself (apart from some plugins).
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