🥟 Chao-Down #46 Human Artistry Campaign defends musicians against AI Copyright, New image and video generation tools announced
Plus, Stanford copies ChatGPT for less than $600
Today’s edition is all about generative AI art! It seems like a whole host of product announcements came all at once in the last 48 hours.
We’re seeing new image generation tools from Adobe and Microsoft, alongside updates to beta text-to-video projects from Runway ML.
If you’re a creative, you now have so many fun tools to play with. I know what I’m doing this weekend.
-Alex, your resident Chaos Coordinator.
What happened in AI? 📰
AI and Copyright: Human Artistry Campaign Launches to Support Musicians (Variety)
Stable Diffusion Reimagine - a new Clipdrop tool that allows users to generate multiple variations of a single image without limits (Stability AI Blog)
Microsoft brings OpenAI’s DALL-E image creator to the new Bing (TechCrunch)
Adobe Firefly generative A.I. lets users type to edit images (CNBC)
The genie escapes: Stanford copies the ChatGPT AI for less than $600 (New Atlas)
Gen-2: A multi-modal AI system that can generate novel videos with text, images, or video clips. Runway Research (Runway ML)
Always be Learnin’ 📕 📖
Let's think about slowing down AI - by Katja Grace (Substack)
Projects to Keep an Eye On 🛠
BloopAI/bloop: bloop is a fast code search engine written in Rust. (Github)
LangFlow is a UI for LangChain, designed with react-flow to provide an effortless way to experiment and prototype flows. (Github)
The Latest in AI Research 💡
CoDEPS: Online Continual Learning for Depth Estimation and Panoptic Segmentation (arxiv)
Simfluence: Modeling the Influence of Individual Training Examples by Simulating Training Runs (arxiv)
LION: Implicit Vision Prompt Tuning (arxiv)
The World Outside of AI 🌎
Microsoft plans mobile games app store to rival Apple and Google (Ars Technica)
Netflix is actively working on cloud gaming (9to5google.com)
The Internet Archive defends its digital library in court (The Verge)
Hydrogen-powered planes take off with startup's test flight | (MIT Technology Review)