Artificial intelligence is developing rapidly. While some are embracing it, others are warning of the potential threats. But both sides agree, the technology is changing how the world operates.
"We're only two and a half years into the whole AI boom, the first commercially available product launched at the end of November in 2022," White House AI and Crypto Czar David Sacks said.
Over the next year, we can see more visual uses for AI. Text-based large language models are shifting toward video, audio and imaging.
"There are paper books, there are electronic books. It doesn't mean that you use only electronic books now. I have a lot of paper books," said Margarita Grubina, vice president of business growth at voice-cloning special effects firm Respeecher. "And then there is a different a