The BBC is considering building an in-house artificial intelligence model from text archives; MIT develops artificial intelligence tools to generate high-quality images 30 times faster; Research shows that artificial intelligence can automate 84% of government work; Yotta data service Targeting the global AI market with the cheapest compute rates – this and more in our daily roundup. Let’s take a look.

1. BBC considers building in-house AI model from text archives

The BBC plans to use text archives to create an in-house artificial intelligence model aimed at enhancing production processes. This model (possibly a large language model) is only accessible to the BBC. The BBC has reportedly been in talks with tech companies over access to archives of artificial intelligence training, but the BBC has denied a commercial deal has been reached.Reuters also focuses on addressing bias in AI models report.

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2. MIT develops artificial intelligence to generate high-quality images 30 times faster

Now, AI can generate high-quality images 30 times faster in one step. Traditional diffusion models that require complex iterations have been revolutionized by MIT CSAIL researchers. Their framework Distribution Matching Distillation (DMD) simplifies the process into a teacher-student model, significantly speeding up generation while maintaining image quality.According to MIT News, this advancement combines the principles of GANs and diffusion models and has the potential to become a new standard for generative modeling. Report.

3. Research shows that artificial intelligence can automate 84% of government work

new Research The Alan Turing Institute says AI could automate 84% of UK government services, including passport processing and voter registration. Dr. Jonathan Bright highlighted the potential for significant time savings. Study examined 143 million duplicate transactions, shows AI has potential to reshape modern governance, NDTV report.

4. Yotta data service targets the global artificial intelligence market with the cheapest computing rates

The CEO of Yotta Data Services claims to offer the cheapest AI computing rates in the world, saying multi-year contracts are priced as low as $1.8 per GPU hour. Yotta forms a strategic partnership with NVIDIA to address the global GPU shortage. Yotta operates in the special economic zone, using energy supplies from group companies, and plans to break even in 2-3 years, Economic Times report.

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5. Salman Rushdie criticizes artificial intelligence writing tools

Salman Rushdie has criticized artificial intelligence writing tools, saying they lack originality and humor. He tested ChatGPT and found its output to be “meaningless” and far from his style. Rushdie acknowledged the potential threat to formulaic writers, but he argued that serious novelists remained unchallenged. However, he warned of the rapid learning of AI and its potential impact on genre writers, especially in Hollywood, NDTV report.

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