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- 🤖 North Korea experiments with AI warfare
🤖 North Korea experiments with AI warfare
PLUS: IBM's brain-inspired turbochip
Welcome, AI enthusiasts.
North Korea is reportedly harnessing AI to accelerate cyber exploits — posing a severe threat to companies and individuals worldwide.
Is the world prepared to defend against the next level of cyber warfare? Let’s dive in…
In today’s AI rundown:
🇰🇵 North Korea experiments with AI cyber attacks
💨 Brain-inspired IBM chip turbocharges AI
🛠️ 8 New AI tools
🎨 Quickly generate AI images with Google Search
🤖 3 Quick AI updates
Read time: 3 minutes
LATEST DEVELOPMENTS
SECURITY & AI
Image source: Midjourney
The Rundown: A US official just revealed that North Korea is escalating its cyber capabilities by using AI, posing a severe new threat to global enterprises.
The details:
Deputy National Security Advisor Anne Neuberger publicly confirmed North Korea is weaponizing AI for cyberattacks.
North Korea is applying AI and machine learning to expedite writing malware and identifying vulnerable targets.
The country’s past attacks, like the Sony hack and WannaCry ransomware deployment, caused billions in worldwide damages.
Revenue from cyber crimes may fund North Korea's missile program, motivating continued development.
Why it matters: For as much good as AI can accomplish — bad actors embracing AI has always been inevitable. Defenses must stay a step ahead to combat the malicious AI use cases already being developed.
TOGETHER WITH OCTOML
The Rundown: Learn practical AI skills you can use to level up and differentiate your AI app in this free, one-hour live virtual event hosted by OctoML and the GenAI Collective.
You’ll learn:
What “domain specificity” is and how to achieve it with large language models.
How to evaluate open source LLMs like Llama2, CodeLlama, and Mistral to help you build efficiently.
Best practices to train, run, customize, deploy, and scale LLMs when your goal is a successful, revenue-driven application.
IBM
Image source: IBM
The Rundown: IBM just developed a new brain-inspired AI processing chip called NorthPole, which can perform tasks like image recognition much faster while using far less power.
The details:
NorthPole has 256 cores with onboard memory, avoiding constant external memory access that slows processing.
In standard image recognition tests, it beat existing AI chips substantially on speed and energy efficiency.
The chip’s architecture is inspired by connections in the human cerebral cortex.
IBM estimates NorthPole could be 25x more efficient than current designs using the latest manufacturing.
The relevance: This breakthrough seems poised to unlock AI's next level of efficiency and speed. Will innovations like NorthPole allow IBM to challenge Nvidia for the AI chip throne?
QUESTION OF THE DAY
🤖 Who should regulate AI development?Vote below (click for live results) |
TRENDING TOOLS
📣 Speechmatics- Transcribe, translate, interpret, analyze, and understand the spoken word with Speech Intelligence by Speechmatics. Try it free without code (link)*
📊 Impaction AI- Analytics for conversational AI products (link)
🎨 Design Studio- Unlock AI magic for elevated customer engagement, fast (link)
☁️ Middleware- AI-powered cloud observability (link)
🕸️ Webstudio AI- Build 3x faster with voice and AI (link)
🧑💻 Novu- Open-source notification infrastructure for devs (link)
⚡️ Zipchat AI- AI-powered e-com sales & support (link)
✏️ Yaara- Use AI to write proven, high-converting copy (link)
🦾 Fine Tuner- Build AI agents at scale (link)
🧑⚖️ AI Lawyer- Personal AI lawyer at your fingertips (link)
Browse the most popular tools ever featured with our tool database.
* = This is sponsored content
AI TRAINING
Google has quietly launched a fast, free, and intuitive AI image creator hidden in Search — but few people are aware of it.
Follow these steps to access and try it for yourself:
Enable the feature:
Go to labs.google.com
In "Google Search," click "Get started" on "SGE generative AI."
Activate the experiment.
If you live in a restricted are, you can access with a VPN.
Create images from prompts: Type any text description of the image you want generated. Our starting example was “a robot painting a mural outside with the text ‘The Rundown’ in the sky.“
Refine and edit: Once your images are generated, click into one to open Google’s editor. From here, click on the pencil/star icon below the prompt to have the AI improve your prompt, or add your own details.
QUICK HITS
Two tech titans are joining forces on AI, with Foxconn and Nvidia announcing plans to build "AI factories" — next-gen data centers that will pump out autonomous systems trained on Nvidia's cutting-edge hardware. The two companies hope to accelerate the “AI industrial revolution”.
Major music publishers are accusing Anthropic of illegally using 500+ song lyrics to train its AI assistant Claude. The lawsuit from a trio of studios (Universal Music, ABKCO, and Concord) claims Claude regurgitates copyrighted lines when prompted, violating publishers’ rights.
YouTube is reportedly seeking rights to train an AI tool to clone musicians' voices — legally allowing creators to generate songs mimicking artists. As AI replicas spark lawsuits, YouTube is offering a licensed solution — similar to what AI remixer Ghostwriter proposed.
Browse all available AI job positions with our job board.
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