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Jamie Dimon Predicts 3.5-Day Workweek, Stanford AI Scandal Unveiled, and ‘Promptography’ Takes Off

Hi there,

Today’s Daily AI Brief highlights Jamie Dimon’s predictions about a 3.5-day workweek with AI, a Stanford professor accused of fabricating evidence using AI and the creative rebranding of AI-generated images as ‘promptography.’

Today’s top stories

Jamie Dimon, CEO of JPMorgan, forecasts a future where AI advancements could see employees working just 3.5 days a week and living to 100 years old, while highlighting both potential benefits and risks of AI in the workplace. Read more

Stanford Professor Jeff Hancock is facing accusations of using AI to create a non-existent study in his testimony supporting a Minnesota law against political deepfakes, raising questions about the validity of the evidence presented. Read more

Vincent Granville argues that traditional large language models are not truly 'trained' due to their focus on irrelevant tasks, proposing his xLLM as a more efficient alternative. Read more

Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff believes that AI's future is in autonomous agents that perform tasks independently, rather than in large language models, stating that the potential of LLMs has been overestimated. Read more

Hugging Face has launched Observers, an open-source Python SDK designed to enhance AI observability by tracking and analyzing interactions with generative AI models, supporting multiple providers with minimal configuration. Read more

Bernard Looney, previously CEO of BP, has announced he will become chair of Prometheus Hyperscale, a US-based data center startup planning a $10 billion project in Wyoming, with aspirations to attract major tech companies. Read more

The term 'promptography' is gaining traction as artists redefine AI-generated images, distinguishing them from traditional photography. Coined by Christian Vince, the term highlights the use of prompts in AI image creation, and it's gaining popularity on social media. Read more

Jensen Huang, CEO of Nvidia, highlighted that solving AI hallucination problems will take several years and require more computing power during an interview at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. Read more

Yoshua Bengio, a prominent AI expert, expressed concerns at the One Young World Summit about the risks of AI being controlled by a small group of powerful individuals, emphasizing the need for global policy development to prevent misuse. Read more