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Read full article about: Google tests AI-generated quizzes on YouTube

YouTube is experimenting with a new AI quiz feature for select English-language educational videos.

The AI-generated quizzes are designed to test users' understanding of a topic covered in a recently viewed video. The quiz feature is being rolled out globally to some iOS and Android users of the YouTube app, and will apply to some English-language educational videos. If the test is successful, Google could build valuable human feedback loops around its video content and potentially use it for further AI training.

Read full article about: Japan allows limited use of AI in schools

The Japanese Ministry of Education has issued guidelines allowing the limited use of generative artificial intelligence such as ChatGPT in elementary, middle and high schools.

The guidelines call for special caution in its use by elementary school students (under the age of 13). In addition, submitting purely AI-generated schoolwork as a personal submission is considered cheating. Students should not enter personal information and should respect copyright laws.

The guidelines are preliminary and allow for limited use. In the fall, the Education Department plans to select a number of middle and high schools to test the use of AI and revise the guidelines based on the results.

Recently, the Hong Kong Department of Education unveiled an AI curriculum.

Read full article about: Google updates its privacy policy for the age of AI web scraping

Google updated its privacy policy, stating it reserves the right to scrape the internet for data to build its AI tools, such as Google Translate, Bard, and Cloud AI capabilities.

The practice goes beyond traditional policies covering the company's use of data posted on its services and extends to all public internet content. This approach could lead to legal battles over copyright, as courts may have to address issues surrounding AI scraping. Twitter and Reddit have taken steps to protect intellectual property by limiting third-party access to their APIs.

Google uses information to improve our services and to develop new products, features and technologies that benefit our users and the public. For example, we use publicly available information to help train Google’s AI models and build products and features like Google Translate, Bard, and Cloud AI capabilities.

 

Google privacy policy

Read full article about: Generative AI for video gets better with Runway Gen-2 update

Generative AI for videos is getting better and better: Runway has given Gen-2 an update that significantly improves the quality of the results. Gen-2 can generate short video clips from text descriptions, recently added a preview function, and has been available in the browser and smartphone app for iOS since June. The company also employs one of the AI researchers behind Stable Diffusion.

https://twitter.com/SteveMills/status/1674805822583623680