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Wednesday’s top story: OpenAI has re-launched its advanced voice feature after actress Scarlett Johanssen accused them of stealing her voice when they originally launched it in May, forcing a swift takedown of the feature.
🌟 OpenAI’s voice feature is back!
📃 How to create AI-generated documentation in seconds
📢 Microsoft demands AI fraud laws
🔓 How to unlock the power of safe and reliable AI
📊How to advertise on Instagram using ChatGPT
🔥 Perplexity shares ad revenue
❤️ AI friend: Cure for loneliness?
Read Time: 5 minutes
As anticipated AI stocks continue to show momentum to the downside. NVIDIA has dropped over 35% since the all-time high printed in June. Investors are nervous about the release of the new Federal Funds rate. Learn more.
Our Report: OpenAI has re-released its GPT-4o-powered Advanced Voice Mode feature (which it originally launched in May, but took down after it was accused of using actress Scarlett Johanssen’s voice without her permission for one of its pre-set voices, Sky) to a small set of ChatGPT Plus users so they can test the hyperrealistic voice feature.
🔑 Key Points:
The advanced voice feature is more capable than the existing voice feature as it “offers more natural, real-time conversations, allows you to interrupt anytime, and senses and responds to your emotions.”
It has four preset voices—Juniper, Breeze, Cove, and Ember—which were built using paid actors (the Sky voice is not available!), it can’t impersonate voices, and it “will block outputs that differ from the pre-set voices.”
The chosen few ChatGPT Plus users will get a notification in the ChatGPT app, followed by an email with instructions, and OpenAI will “add more people on a rolling basis,” with plans for all Plus users to have it by the fall.
🤔 Why you should care: The advanced voice feature was actually meant to launch in June, but OpenAI delayed it by a month to “improve the model’s ability to detect and refuse certain content,” and is slowly rolling the feature out to make the voice mode “safer and more enjoyable for everyone,” which is perhaps a move designed to quieten mounting speculation about its prioritization of “shiny product launches” over safety, as many ex-employees have testified.
Together with Guidde
It’s time to delegate that work to AI.
Guidde is a GPT-powered tool with AI-generated documentation that helps you explain the most complex tasks in seconds.
Turn boring documentation into stunning visual guides
Save valuable time by creating video documentation 11x quicker
Share or embed your guide anywhere for your team to see
Meco is a distraction-free space for reading and discovering newsletters, separate from the inbox
VideoDubber translates and dubs videos, audio, and subtitles with AI
Upscayl makes images larger and clearer without losing any detail
CoolMindMaps is an AI tool that creates mind maps on any topic
TTSMaker generates audio from text in multiple languages
Our Report: Microsoft has called on the US government for a more comprehensive and enforceable law to crack down on AI-generated deepfakes and protect the public against fraud, abuse, and manipulation, especially during election time.
🔑 Key Points:
Microsoft President—Brad Smith—believes law enforcement needs a “legal framework” to charge the perpetrators of AI-generated fraud and prevent cyber-criminals from “using technology to steal from everyday Americans.”
He’s also pushing for a law that makes AI companies label AI-generated content (like Meta’s “Made with AI”) to help the public “better understand whether the content is AI-generated or manipulated.”
Microsoft thinks the US government needs to move now to “safeguard elections, thwart scams, and protect people from online abuse” as they’re not keeping up with AI fraud and manipulation.
🤔 Why you should care: While Microsoft’s plea will not be enough to make policymakers move any quicker, it establishes their position on the matter and puts pressure on other tech giants—like OpenAI, Google, and Apple—to do the same as “the private sector has a responsibility to implement safeguards that prevent the misuse of AI.”
Together with Kolena
The rapid advancement of Generative AI and Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) systems has opened up new possibilities for the finance-industry.
However, building reliable AI products that are both safe and reliable can be frustrating and time-consuming.
If you’re ready to crack the code on RAG systems join Kolena’s webinar as they navigate the complex world of RAG systems for the finance-industry. From understanding FinanceBench to mastering best practices, they’ve got you covered.
Type this prompt into ChatGPT:
Results: After typing this prompt, you will get an Instagram story idea that compares your product/service with competitors’ alternatives and establishes why yours is the right option for your target market.
P.S. Use the Prompt Engineer GPT by AI Tool report to 10x your prompts.
The company was being bombarded with customer support tickets. Serving a customer base of varying technological prowess, questions were being funneled through “support tickets,” requiring the team to dedicate considerable time to address simple questions.
Adam Shoqar, the VP of innovation, began looking for a way to solve this and found Zappier’s no-code chatbot builder. In under an hour, Adam built and embedded a customized chatbot across Learn It Live's sites, reducing support tickets by 40%.
Following weeks of plagiarism accusations, AI search engine start-up, Perplexity, has launched a “Publishers’ Program” to share ad revenue with its publishing partners including Time, Der Fortune, and Entrepreneur.
Under the program, when Perplexity shows content from these publishers (in response to a search query), they’ll get a share of the ad revenue, plus a paid-for subscription to its Enterprise tier and developer tools.
The revenue share scheme will be consistent across all publishers on the program (but initial partners will get more “favorable terms”) and is—according to Perplexity—“a much better revenue split than Google, which is zero.”
After disappointing AI wearable releases—namely the Rabbit R1 and Humane’s AI Pin—Avi Schiffmann (who built an award-winning pandemic tracker) is building a new wearable ‘AI companion’, called ‘Friend.’
‘Friend’ isn’t for productivity, it's to cure loneliness: Users can talk to it, it connects to their mobile via Bluetooth and listens to conversations, and it sends proactive messages (like wishing them luck for an interview).
Expected to ship in January, users can wear ‘Friend’ like a necklace so it’s easy to talk to, and Schiffmann believes it will create better emotional connections than other, similar tools from Replika or Character AI.
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Until next time, Martin & Liam.
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