ai art is likely here to stay so pressure from regulators, input from artists and an informed public will be crucial to make sure these revolutionary tools are built alongside the people who helped make them possible. that was ben, and this is this week s tech news. microsoft will have to pay $20 million to us federal regulators after it was found the company illegally collected data on children who started xbox accounts. the federal trade commission said the technology company failed to inform parents about the data it was collecting. apple has unveiled its first major hardware in almost a decade apple vision pro. the long rumoured headset combines virtual reality and augmented reality and is controlled with eyes, hands and voices. the headset allows you to watch
to find posts using karla s name to generate work that looks incredibly similar to hers, and the same is true for dozens of other artists online. so earlier this year karla and a group of other artists filed a class action lawsuit against stability ai and a group of other ai image generators. in the meantime, karla made the decision to take her work off the internet wherever she could. she figured it was the only way to avoid a computer scraping her work into an image data set without her consent. but what if she could still show her work online and keep it from being used to help generate new ai art? honestly, we just never had any idea it was such an impactful problem. this is professor ben zhao, from the university of chicago. he and his lab say they have developed a solution. they call it glaze. at its core, glaze uses the fact that there is this ginormous gap, difference between the way humans see visual images and how learning
was taken without their consent to use, to train these models so that they can generate that stuff that makes people go, wow . ai art is likely here to stay so pressure from regulators, input from artists and an informed public will be crucial to make sure these revolutionary tools are built alongside the people who helped make them possible. that was ben, and this is this week s tech news. microsoft will have to pay $20 million to us federal regulators after it was found the company illegally collected data on children who started xbox accounts. the federal trade commission said the technology company failed to inform parents about the data it was collecting. apple has unveiled its first major hardware in almost a decade apple vision pro. the long rumoured headset combines virtual reality and augmented