Companies in the tech and software sectors that are creating generative AI platforms have a severe shortage of content for their AI models to be trained, and let’s face it, who isn’t these days? Adobe is one of a few companies that pay contributors to submit content to train their AI models, Bloomberg reported Thursday.
Much like Firefly’s text-to-image technology, Adobe is not the first to finish with video either, and the company has only mentioned text-to-video in general terms so far. OpenAI’s Sora has been in the public sphere for a few months, and plenty of other companies are working on video generation.
It is reported that Adobe pays between 6 and 16 cents for each photo and an average of $2.62 per minute for videos.
Adobe said in the article that the videos will be used to aid in the development of an AI text-to-video generator. This will be added to the tools the business now uses to create graphics and pictures.
Training AI models that create still photos is hard, and training a video-generation model is even more challenging. YouTube’s hackles are already raised concerning how OpenAI possibly trained Sora, and OpenAI is being very closed-off about that topic itself.
It stands to reason that Adobe is looking for specific sorts of content to help fill any gaps in its Adobe Stock library, which is positioned more as a commercial solution than a resource for all the diverse types of videos needed to train a generative AI model.
Is Your Samsung Phone Getting Smarter? AI Power Coming to More Galaxy Models!
It may be exciting to buy a new phone, but many customers would rather keep their old faithful for several years. However, Samsung will not forget about older Galaxy phone users.
In the Indian Express, an article confirms that Samsung is in the works of making AI features available on the previous models. Essentially, this could entail things like AI-driven improved camera abilities among others, smarter assistants like Bixby, and battery management enhanced by artificial intelligence-based learning.
However, other devices such as Galaxy S21 FE and Galaxy Tab 8 FE among others cannot get this update since they are just discussed flagship smartphones in this post.
Furthermore, it has been stated that the 2022 flagship devices receiving the OneUI 6.1 update will only have all of the AI features, and that they will receive “Galaxy S23 FE level AI,” which means that previous devices won’t be able to use features like Instant Slow-Mo.
What is Galaxy AI?
Introduced at the Samsung Unpacked event, Galaxy AI is the company’s suite of artificial intelligence features designed to enhance the functionality of its devices. The South Korean smartphone giant had announced that the technology will be integrated across a range of Galaxy devices, including smartphones and tablets like the Galaxy S23 series, Galaxy Z Fold5, Galaxy Z Flip5, and the Galaxy Tab S9 series.
In other news, Samsung also recently announced that it is adding support for 3 new dialects in Galaxy AI namely Australian Engliish, Cantonese and Canadian English. The company also plans to add support for four more languages later this year: Romanian, Turkish, Dutch, traditional Chinese and Swedish
Can Instagram Help You More? Testing of AI Chatbot Begins in India
Instagram, the social media platform of Meta, is piloting a new artificial intelligence (AI) algorithm-based feature. The most recent feature to be introduced by the company is Meta AI, a general-purpose AI-powered chatbot. It can answer questions and produce poetry through simple text prompts the same way Bing Chat does.Meta launched Meta AI in September 2023 and has since integrated the chatbot into a variety of products, including Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp.
One can access it by hitting on the Meta AI icon in the search bar and interacting one-on-one with the chatbot, similar to OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini, which acts as a general-purpose assistant that can answer a variety of questions, including real-time information.
A remarkable characteristic about Meta AI is that it has an image production tool that can produce realistic looking visuals from texts very fast. By typing ‘@MetaAI /imagine’ followed by their desired text prompt, users can activate this feature thereby improving on the visual aspect of their talks.
Moreover, Meta rolled out AI stickers for WhatsApp, Messenger, Instagram, and Facebook Stories, enabling users to elevate visual communication with personalized stickers generated from text prompts. This functionality, similar to Snapchat’s AI-generated Bitmoji stickers, will be progressively introduced to chosen English-language users in the coming month, broadening creative options within Meta’s platform.
Check who got the $ $ spotlight $ $ today?
Elon Musk’s OpenAI Seeks Up to $4 Billion in Funding
Tabs Lands $7 Million to Streamline B2B Invoicing with AI-powered Receivables Platform
Orlando AI EdTech Startup PETE Secures $2 Million to Power Up Next-Gen Workforce Learning
Patlytics Secures $4.5 Million to Transform Patent Intelligence with Google’s AI Expertise
Sapien Scores $5 Million to Gamify AI’s Learning with Human Expertise