A big moment for AI was its 1955 coinage, but this year’s Nobel haul qualifies too. Laureate Geoffrey Hinton, famously ‘a man who never sits down,’ had computers mimic the human brain for ‘deep learning’ while Demis Hassabis set up DeepMind,
As AI tech gets smarter it’s getting harder to spot the difference between content made by a human and what’s been dreamed up by an algorithm. Google, pushing the AI envelope itself, is aware of this and wants to help.
I spent a couple of days last week at the University of Oxford in the UK where I spoke at and attended the Oxford Generative AI Summit. This multi-stakeholder event brought together elected and appointed officials from the UK and other countries along with academics and executives and scientists from tech and media companies.
SynthID is a technology from Google DeepMind that watermarks and identifies AI-generated content by embedding digital watermarks directly into AI-generated images, audio, text, or video.
SynthID can watermark AI-generated content across different modalities such as text, images, audio, and videos.
SynthID is a tool for watermarking content generated using artificial intelligence (AI), including video, images, and text. Google DeepMind, an AI research laboratory, has announced that it's making its tool accessible to developers and businesses to help them identify AI-generated content.
The move gives the entire AI industry an easy, seemingly robust way to silently mark content as artificially generated, which could be useful for detecting deepfakes and other damaging AI content before it goes out in the wild.
Google has finally open-sourced SynthID Text, which is its watermarking and detection tool for AI-generated text.
Half the prize goes to Demis Hassabis and John M. Jumper from Google DeepMind for using AI to solve protein folding, and the other to David Baker for tools to help design new proteins. The futurist argues that advances in AI and medicine will offer us ...
What’s new: Google DeepMind has developed a tool for identifying AI-generated text and is making it available open source. The tool, called SynthID, is part of a larger family of watermarking tools for generative AI outputs.
Developers can now use Google’s SynthID Text technology to determine whether text was made by their own AI models.
Google's DeepMind division has announced a watermarking tool focused on detecting AI-generated text with high accuracy.