the ai is highly suspicious. and in the fast moving game of ai artwork, who owns what? and can artists protect their work? for some time artificial intelligence has been all around us. you might not have noticed it, but your video streaming services, social media feeds, the maps on your smart phones, they ve all been steadily improving their performance because the computers behind them have been learning. and then last year, something important happened. yeah. ai got human or at least it felt like it did. companies like google and open ai started showing off stunning photorealistic images like these, all created by ai from short text descriptions. and then ai started having conversations with us. they were starting to generate stuff that felt human. this field of generative ai seems to have exploded so quickly. chat gtp is the single fastest growing application in human history. and it keeps getting better. the latest version, gpta, even seems to be able to look at a pictu
around that time, scientists learned something extraordinary. whales were communicating with each other. sometimes by song over long distances. in part, because of that discovery, scientists and conservationists rallied to enact laws to protect the whales and it worked. the humpback whale population has made a remarkable comeback. now they face a host of new threats. global warming is killing off their food source and human activity is causing thousands of whale deaths a year from the stress of underwater construction noise to fishing entang amments and ship collisions. in the next hour, cnn s bill weir takes us to antarctica, a place very few get to visit to study these remarkable creatures and show us why saving the whales may also be saving the planet. because they are one of our best partners in battling climate change. reporter: those are the songs of humpback whales, flying about 15 billion miles away from earth, on the off chance intelligent life out there wants to
and how it s transforming the world around us. yeah, that includes in health care, where we meet the ai helping radiologists to diagnose cancer. you can see these little white dots. the ai is highly suspicious. and in the fast moving game of ai artwork, who owns what? and can artists protect their work? for some time artificial intelligence has been all around us. you might not have noticed it, but your video streaming services, social media feeds, the maps on your smartphones, they ve all been steadily improving their performance because the computers behind them have been learning. and then last year, something important happened. ai got human or at least it felt like it did. companies like google and openai started showing off stunning photorealistic images like these, all created by ai from short text descriptions. and then ai started having conversations with us. they were starting to generate stuff that felt human. this field of generative ai seems to have exploded so
with the ultimate speed, power, and reliability the xfinity 10g network is made for streaming live sports. because it s only live once. join xfinity rewards on the xfinity app or go to xfinity1stand10gs.com for your chance to win. tonight on three 60, the state of the british royal family. what we re learning about the state of king charles s health after what started as a common medical procedure ends in a cancer diagnosis. also tonight, there s breaking news just today after learning what is in the tough new bipartisan border security legislation. republican senators signaled a deal may be dead. plus, the latest from southern california. reeling from more than a month s worth of rain in barely a day. good evening, we begin tonight with king charles. just a week ago he left the hospital after treatment for a benign enlarged prostate, and was said to be doing well. today we learned that he has been diagnosed with cancer and has already started treatment for it. as you mig
50 years ago humpback whales were considered an endangered species after decades of commercial whaling decimated the population. around that same time scientists learned something extraordinary. whales were communicating with each other, sometimes by song over long distances. in part because of that discovery scientists and conservationists rallied to enact laws to protect the whales, and it worked. the humpback whale population has made a remarkable comeback. but now they face a host of new threats. global warming is killing off their food source, and human activity is causing thousands of whale deaths a year. from the stress of underwater construction noise to fishing entanglements and ship collisions. in the next hour cnn s bill weir takes us to antarctica, a place very few people get to visit, to study these remarkable creatures and show us why saving the whales may also be saving the planet. because they are one of our best partners in battling climate change. reporter