In his annual letter, YouTube CEO Neal Mohan teases tools that will let you make AI versions of yourself, generate games with a single prompt, and experiment with music.
Social media has been flooded with fake, AI-generated images and videos. But will the majority of users actually care?
A few platforms have rolled out settings and features to help minimize AI-generated content. Here's how to use them.
Princess Diana stumbling through a parkour park. Team USA taking gold at the Bong Olympics. Tank Man breakdancing in Tiananmen Square. Kurt Cobain playing pogs. Tupac Shakur seeking poutine in Costco.
AI slop is getting worse. A big trouble is how AI slop is going to undermine AI-generated mental health advice. I layout the specifics. An AI Insider scoop.
Real estate listings have always featured a bit of marketing gloss cozy rooms, charming quirks, and “up-and-coming” neighborhoods. But a ...
Merriam-Webster recently named “slop” as its 2025 Word of the Year, citing the explosion of low-quality, AI-created digital content that now clogs all of our inboxes and social feeds. While employers ...
Peer review has met its match.
Some Animal Crossing: New Horizons players have started sharing in-game design photos that utilize AI, and the community is ...
Right now in the AI world, there are a lot of percolating ideas and experimentation. But as far as Replit CEO Amjad Masad is concerned, the results are unreliable, marginally effective, and generic.