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Search Result for “publishers”

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OPINION

The 'living happily ever after' rule is for everyone

Oped, Steve Ammidown, Published on 14/02/2025

» The romance genre has a single set-in-stone rule: The main characters of the story will end up happily in a relationship. The HEA (Happily Ever After) or the HFN (Happy for Now) is the expectation of every reader who picks up a romance novel in the same way a mystery reader waits for a big twisty reveal or a fantasy reader anticipates strange and arcane magic.

OPINION

Danish media's stand on Big Tech

Oped, Karen Rønde, Published on 06/02/2025

» As AI slop spreads across the internet, concerns about the future of high-quality information are growing. Without accurate and relevant human-generated data, model collapse -- whereby generative artificial intelligence trains on its own output and gradually degrades -- seems inevitable. The tech giants, well aware of this risk, have cut corners and skirted copyright law in their pursuit of training data for their large language models.

OPINION

The high cost of GPT-4o 'giveaway'

Oped, Angela Huyue Zhang & S Alex Yang, Published on 08/06/2024

» With the launch of GPT-4o, OpenAI has once again shown itself to be the world's most innovative artificial-intelligence company. This new multimodal AI tool -- which seamlessly integrates text, voice, and visual capabilities -- is significantly faster than previous models, greatly enhancing the user experience. But perhaps the most attractive feature of GPT-4o is that it is free -- or so it seems.

OPINION

Understanding 'Animal Farm' in Zimbabwe

Oped, Beaven Tapureta, Published on 27/04/2024

» I began to notice Animal Farm references start to proliferate in Zimbabwe in 2008.

OPINION

How to regulate generative AI

Oped, S Alex Yang & Angela Huyue Zhang, Published on 20/02/2024

» The impending rollout of the European Union's Artificial Intelligence Act represents the bloc's latest attempt to cement its status as a regulatory powerhouse. This ambitious legislation, which aims to impose stringent regulations on AI technologies, underscores the EU's commitment to proactive governance.

OPINION

AI set to reinforce Big Tech's dominance of economy

Oped, Eric Posner, Published on 19/01/2024

» With long-gestating antitrust cases against Google, Apple, and Amazon coming to fruition, many observers think that 2024 could be a turning point for Big Tech. Yet even as authorities press ahead with this litigation, they risk being blindsided by the rise of artificial intelligence, which is likely to reinforce Big Tech's dominance of the economy.

OPINION

Making education keep up with change

Oped, Nattawut Permjit, Published on 13/09/2023

» Thai children spend long hours in school. In fact, their school hours are among the longest in the world. But is all that classroom learning actually worth it in the real world?

OPINION

Unlocking AI's potential for everybody

Oped, Diane Coyle, Published on 18/08/2023

» Artificial intelligence is moving fast. People are using generative AI and large language models (LLMs) to build new services and perform existing tasks, and the underlying technology itself is advancing quickly. As the Nobel laureate economist Michael Spence observes, this wave of adoption could well yield significant productivity gains, after almost two decades of lackluster growth. Every day brings news like Google's recent announcement that its AI has helped American Airlines reduce contrails by 54%, reducing each flight's climate footprint.

OPINION

Press fights back Big Tech disruption

Oped, Anya Schiffrin, Published on 26/05/2023

» Two years ago, the Australian parliament passed the News Media Bargaining Code, which forced Meta (Facebook) and Alphabet (Google) to compensate media outlets for news content shared on their platforms. The law has been a remarkable success, with Australian media outlets now receiving more than A$200 million (about 6.9 billion baht) annually from Big Tech firms.

OPINION

Global crises put China at an advantage

Oped, John J. Metzler, Published on 31/03/2023

» As they say, you can't make this up. In the course of just over a week, China and Russia reaffirmed their friendship and military ties, the Iranian regime proxies lashed out with rockets at US forces in neighbouring Syria, North Korea shot off a few more missiles, France was rocked by serious rioting, all to the backdrop of what could well be a global banking crisis sending financial shockwaves from Silicon Valley to Switzerland.