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OpenAI boss accuses Meta of trying to poach staff with $100m sign-on bonuses

about 10 hours ago
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The boss of OpenAI has claimed that Mark Zuckerberg’s Meta has tried to poach his top artificial intelligence experts with “crazy” signing bonuses of $100m (£74m), as the scramble for talent in the booming sector intensifies.Sam Altman spoke about the offers in a podcast on Tuesday.They have not been confirmed by Meta.OpenAI, the company that developed ChatGPT, said it had nothing to add beyond its chief executive’s comments.“They started making these giant offers to a lot of people on our team – $100m signing bonuses, more than that comp [compensation] per year,” Altman told the Uncapped podcast, which is presented by his brother, Jack.

“It is crazy.I’m really happy that, at least so far, none of our best people have decided to take them up on that.”He said: “I think the strategy of a tonne of upfront, guaranteed comp, and that being the reason you tell someone to join … the degree to which they’re focusing on that, and not the work and not the mission – I don’t think that’s going to set up a great culture.”Meta last week launched a $15bn drive towards computerised “super-intelligence” – a type of AI that can perform better than humans at all tasks.The company bought a large stake in the $29bn startup Scale AI, set up by the programmer Alexandr Wang, 28, who joined Meta as part of the deal.

Last week, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, Deedy Das, tweeted: “The AI talent wars are absolutely ridiculous”,Das, a principal at Menlo Ventures, said Meta had been losing AI candidates to rivals despite offering $2m-a-year salaries,Another report last month found that Anthropic, an AI company backed by Amazon and Google and set up by engineers who left Altman’s company was “siphoning top talent from two of its biggest rivals: OpenAI and DeepMind”,The scramble to recruit the best developers comes amid rapid advances in AI technology and a race to achieve human-level AI capacity – known as artificial general intelligence,The spending on hardware is greater still, with recent estimates from the Carlyle Group, reported by Bloomberg, that $1.

8tn could be spent on computing power by 2030.That is more than the annual gross domestic product of Australia.Some tech firms are buying whole companies to lock in top talent, as seen in part with Meta’s Scale AI deal and Google spending $2.7bn last year on Character.AI, which was founded by the leading AI researcher Noam Shazeer.

He co-wrote the 2017 research paper Attention is all you Need, which is considered a seminal contribution to the current wave of large language model AI systems.While Meta was founded as a social media company and OpenAI as non-profit – becoming a for-profit business last year – the two are now rivals.Altman told his brother’s podcast that he did not feel Meta would succeed in it’s AI push, adding: “I don’t think they’re a company that’s great at innovation.”He said he had once heard Zuckerberg say that it had seemed rational for Google to try to develop a social media function in the early days of Facebook, but “it was clear to people at Facebook that that was not going to work”.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotion“I feel a little bit similar here,” Altman added.

Despite the huge investments in the sector, Altman suggested the result could be “we build legitimate super intelligence, and it doesn’t make the world much better [and] doesn’t change things as much as it sounds like it should”.“The fact that you can have this thing do this amazing stuff for you, and you kind of live your life the same way you did two years ago,” he said.“The thing that I think will be the most impactful in that five to 10-year timeframe is AI will actually discover new science.This is a crazy claim to make, but I think it is true, and if it is correct, then over time I think that will dwarf everything else [AI has achieved].”
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Up to 70% of streams of AI-generated music on Deezer are fraudulent, says report

Up to seven out of 10 streams of artificial intelligence-generated music on the Deezer platform are fraudulent, according to the French streaming platform.The company said AI-made music accounts for just 0.5% of streams on the music streaming platform but its analysis shows that fraudsters are behind up to 70% of those streams.AI-generated music is a growing problem on streaming platforms. Fraudsters typically generate revenue on platforms such as Deezer by using bots to “listen” to AI-generated songs – and take the subsequent royalty payments, which become sizeable once spread across multiple tracks

about 17 hours ago
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Elon Musk’s X sues New York over hate speech and disinformation law

Elon Musk’s X Corp filed a lawsuit on Tuesday against the state of New York, arguing a recently passed law compelling large social media companies to divulge how they address hate speech is unconstitutional.The complaint alleges that bill S895B, known as the Stop Hiding Hate Act, violates free speech rights under the first amendment. The act, which the governor, Kathy Hochul, signed into law last December, requires companies to publish their terms of service and submit reports detailing the steps they take to moderate extremism, foreign influence, disinformation, hate speech and other forms of harmful content.Musk’s lawyers argue that the law, which goes into effect this week, would require X to submit “highly sensitive information” and compel non-commercial speech, which is subject to greater first amendment protections. The complaint also opposes the possible penalty of $15,000 per violation per day for failing to comply with the law

1 day ago
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How AI pales in the face of human intelligence and ingenuity | Letters

Gary Marcus is right to point out – as many of us have for years – that just scaling up compute size is not going to solve the problems of generative artificial intelligence (When billion-dollar AIs break down over puzzles a child can do, it’s time to rethink the hype, 10 June). But he doesn’t address the real reason why a child of seven can solve the Tower of Hanoi puzzle that broke the computers: we’re embodied animals and we live in the world.All living things are born to explore, and we do so with all our senses, from birth. That gives us a model of the world and everything in it. We can infer general truths from a few instances, which no computer can do

1 day ago
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Universities face a reckoning on ChatGPT cheats | Letters

I commend your reporting of the AI scandal in UK universities (Revealed: Thousands of UK university students caught cheating using AI, 15 June), but “tip of the iceberg” is an understatement. While freedom of information requests inform about the universities that are catching AI cheating, the universities that are not doing so are the real problem.In 2023, a widely used assessment platform, Turnitin, released an AI indicator, reporting high reliability from huge-sample tests. However, many universities opted out of this indicator, without testing it. Noise about high “false positives” circulated, but independent research has debunked these concerns (Weber-Wulff et al 2023; Walters 2023; Perkins et al, 2024)

1 day ago
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Bar Council is wise to the risk of AI misuse | Letters

In your report (High court tells UK lawyers to stop misuse of AI after fake case-law citations, 6 June), you quote Dame Victoria Sharp’s call that we, the Bar Council, and our solicitor colleagues at the Law Society address this matter urgently.We couldn’t agree more. This high court judgment emphasises the dangers of the misuse by lawyers of artificial intelligence, particularly large language models, and in particular its serious implications for the administration of justice and public confidence in the justice system.The public is entitled to expect from legal professionals the highest standards of integrity and competence in appropriate understanding and use of new technologies, as well as in all other respects.The Bar Council has already issued guidance on the opportunities and risks surrounding the use of generative AI, which is quoted by the court, and is in the process of setting up a joint working group with the Bar Standards Board to identify how best we can support barristers to uphold those standards with appropriate further training and supervision

1 day ago
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Watch out, hallucinating Humphrey’s about in Whitehall | Brief letters

I doubt that government officials consulted their AI tool, Humphrey, on what it should be called (UK government rollout of Humphrey AI tool raises fears about reliance on big tech, 15 June). It could have advised that in the 1970s the name was used for a milk marketing campaign: “Watch out, there’s a Humphrey about.” That line will now have a whole new meaning. Having spent the last few weeks voting in the Lords to try, in vain, to achieve protections for the creative industries from AI abuse, that meaning might be prophetic. On a personal level, my husband is angry that his name is being stolen again

1 day ago
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Four leading British basketball clubs blocked from Europe as civil war deepens

about 6 hours ago
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Munster’s monster hits shows why Queensland captain’s time has come

about 6 hours ago
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‘It’s going to be pretty monumental’: Harry Potter eyes Wallabies spot for Lions series | Jack Snape

about 7 hours ago
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State of Origin 2025 Game 2: Qld Maroons beat NSW Blues 26-24 – as it happened

about 10 hours ago
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Queensland stay alive after holding off stirring NSW comeback in State of Origin classic

about 10 hours ago
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Florida is now the Stanley Cup’s semi-permanent home. What does that mean for Canada?

about 10 hours ago