A report emerged recently that said the Los Angeles Times had scrambled to remove its AI after just one day of use following an incident in which the system downplayed the negative impact of the white supremacist group, the Ku Klux Klan.
The Los Angeles Times’ billionaire owner, who unveiled an AI tool that generates opposing perspectives to be displayed on Opinion stories, was unaware the new tool had created pro-KKK arguments less than 24 hours after it launched — and hours after the AI comments had been taken down.
Soon, the headlines started: It only took a day for L.A. Times’ new AI tool to sympathize with the KKK. L.A. Times pulls new AI tool off article after it defends the KKK. The L.A. Times’ new AI tool sympathized with the KKK.
The new model is being rolled out by the county’s Homeless Services Authority to help identify people most in need of help.
LA Times new AI-powered "Insights" feature, backfired when it generated content that downplayed the history of the KKK. A lesson for any business on generative AI.
A leading California labor group is backing several first-in-the-nation bills this year that could inspire efforts in other states.
Gehry”, generated from a new large architecture model containing visual data from the LA-based architect’s 65 years in practice
Insights, a new Los Angeles Times AI-powered summary and "bias meter" tool, offered a rosy perspective on the Ku Klux Klan in Orange County.
It’s easy to bypass steps that voice cloning services have taken to prevent nonconsensual voice cloning, according to the report.