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Big-name publishers are refusing to let Apple Intelligence train on data
Cesar Battistini Maziero said:New York times is Amazon, and Meta has a competing service.
I bet Meta, Open AI and google haven't asked permission to train on everyones data.
Besides actually paying for particularly valuable training data, Google offers exactly the same mechanisms as Apple does for publishers to opt-out. If you believe Google is doing the wrong thing, then so is Apple. The opposite is also true of course. If you're proud of the way Apple is approaching it, then you're OK with Google too.
That said, unlike the $multi-million deals Google has made to license data from private sites, I'm not aware of Apple paying for any private site data for AI training. But they are free-scraping them for it if not blocked from doing so, just like OpenAI and Google will in the absence of a licensing agreement.
EDIT: After Google and Meta signed deals with Shutterstock for training data, I see Apple followed in their wake and came to an agreement with them as well. So that's one. -
Big-name publishers are refusing to let Apple Intelligence train on data
AppleInsider said:
Apple has been offering publishers millions of dollars for the right to scrape their sites, as opposed to Google which believes all data should be freely available to train AI large language modules. As part of this, Apple honors a system where a site can just say in a particular file that it does not want to be scraped.
That file is a simple text one called robots.txt, and according to Wired, very many major publishers are choosing to use this to block Apple's AI training.
"According to The Guardian, Google has presented a case to Australian regulators that it be allowed to do what it wants and, okay, maybe publishers should be able to say no. But that's on the publishers, not Google."
Now substitute Apple for Google in that quote. Isn't that what Apple is doing too, scraping unless the publisher says no?
As for paying, both companies have shown a willingness to if the data is important enough. For instance, Google this year alone has signed multi-million deals for access to training data with both Reddit and Stack Overflow.
Apple on the other hand appears to be low-balling potential training data partners, offering less in total than Google is paying Reddit alone, with no evidence yet that any sites are biting. -
Apple all-in on struggling Matter, to the detriment of HomeKit Accessory Protocol
quakerotis said:the smart home is a myth
I currently have dozens of smart devices that in general all work together: Smartphones, Chromebook, security cameras both indoor and out, several smoke and monoxide detectors, HDTV's, multiroom sound system, multiple thermostats, multiple lights, "Find My" trackers, mesh internet system, earbuds, display hubs, temperature sensors, smartwatch, media streaming devices, pod speakers, security system, power outlets....
My smart home is pretty well stocked at the moment. My biggest complaint is the reliability still isn't where it needs to be. Turning on/off the kitchen lights should be nearly as consistent as walking over to the switchplate, but it isn't. Failures happen as much as 10% of the time or thereabouts ( I don't actually keep a record), which is enough for many consumers to decide it's not yet worth the investment. -
Future Apple headsets may use liquid lenses to correct vision
apple4thewin said:This was a rumor at least a year or two ago for the 2nd or 3rd gen VP. Nice to see an actual Patent
EDIT:
So this must be a different patent application from the one reported here about a year ago?
https://appleinsider.com/articles/23/08/17/future-apple-vision-pro-may-use-liquid-for-lenses-instead-of-glass
Is the author aware of any of the multiple patent applications being approved for patent protection, or are all still "pending'? -
Banshee Stealer malware haunts browser extensions on macOS
lotones said:from the linked article - "The web browsers and crypto wallets targeted by the malware comprise Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Brave, Microsoft Edge, Vivaldi, Yandex, Opera, OperaGX, Exodus, Electrum, Coinomi, Guarda, Wasabi Wallet, Atomic, and Ledger."Safari appears to be unaffected judging by the glaring omission.
The quote used in this AI article was truncated.
"The web browsers and crypto wallets targeted by the malware comprise Safari, Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, Brave, Microsoft Edge, Vivaldi, Yandex, Opera, OperaGX, Exodus, Electrum, Coinomi, Guarda, Wasabi Wallet, Atomic, and Ledger."
No idea how reference to Safari managed to be left out.
https://thehackernews.com/2024/08/new-banshee-stealer-targets-100-browser.html