AI风暴来袭:从OpenAI风波到AGI未来,深度解析人工智能的现在与未来

AI风暴来袭:从OpenAI风波到AGI未来,深度解析人工智能的现在与未来

2025-04-26Technology
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Ema3
大家好!欢迎收听本期人工智能播客!
David2
大家好,我是David2。
Ema3
今天我们要聊的话题可是相当精彩!从人工智能的最新发展,到它在各个行业的应用,以及它带来的伦理和社会问题,我们都会一一探讨。
David2
是的,我们会深入分析人工智能在医疗、金融和汽车等领域的实际应用,并解读这些应用背后的技术原理。
Ema3
当然,我们也不会错过人工智能产业的商业方面,例如投资趋势、市场竞争格局等等,都会在本期节目中详细分析!
David2
总之,这是一期信息量非常大的节目,希望大家能从中获益。准备好了吗?让我们开始吧!
Ema3
大家好!欢迎收听本期播客节目,我们今天要聊的话题是人工智能的飞速发展及其影响。
David2
是的,Ema3。最近AI领域真是风起云涌,从OpenAI的内部风波到AI绘画的版权争议,再到AI安全漏洞的发现,可谓是精彩纷呈。
Ema3
对啊!先说说OpenAI的事吧,Sam Altman被短暂解雇又复职,这背后的故事真是跌宕起伏,感觉比电视剧还精彩!
David2
这反映出AI公司治理的复杂性,以及快速发展中伦理和商业利益的冲突。Altman的个人投资和公司利益的潜在冲突,以及内部管理的混乱,都值得我们深思。
Ema3
可不是嘛!还有那AI生成的宫崎骏风格的图片,既让人惊艳,又引发了版权的担忧。宫崎骏老爷子可是明确反对AI绘画的!
David2
这触及到AI艺术创作的版权归属问题,以及AI技术对艺术家的影响。目前法律框架尚不完善,这方面还需要进一步探讨和立法。
Ema3
说到AI的商业化,最近也有一些AI相关的股票值得关注,比如文章提到的IREN和OPRA,听起来前景不错呢!
David2
但投资有风险,我们还是要谨慎。这些股票的估值和增长潜力需要仔细评估,不能盲目跟风。
Ema3
然后是AGI,也就是通用人工智能,听起来很酷炫,但是实现起来好像还有很长的路要走。
David2
没错,AGI是人工智能领域的终极目标,但目前的技术水平还远未达到。许多专家认为,我们距离真正的AGI还有几十年甚至更久的时间。
Ema3
但是,AI安全问题已经迫在眉睫了!那些AI模型的漏洞,简直太可怕了,竟然可以被轻易绕过安全措施!
David2
是的,这些“越狱”攻击表明,我们需要更强大的安全机制来保护AI系统,防止其被恶意利用。这不仅仅是技术问题,也涉及到伦理和社会责任。
Ema3
还有OpenAI的o3模型在ARC-AGI基准测试中取得了令人瞩目的成绩,这是否意味着我们离AGI更近了一步呢?
David2
这是一个积极的信号,但我们不能过度解读。o3的成功只是在特定测试中表现出色,其通用能力还有待进一步验证。
Ema3
AI带来的伦理和法律问题真是太多了,版权诉讼也越来越多,这方面需要尽快找到一个平衡点。
David2
的确,AI的快速发展对现有法律框架提出了挑战,我们需要重新审视和完善相关的法律法规,以适应AI时代的需求。
Ema3
总之,AI发展日新月异,既带来了巨大的机遇,也带来了许多挑战。我们既要拥抱AI技术进步,也要谨慎应对其带来的风险。
David2
说的非常好,Ema3。希望今天的讨论能帮助大家更好地理解AI发展现状及其潜在影响。感谢大家的收听!
Ema3
大家好!欢迎收听本期播客,我们今天的话题是人工智能在各个行业的应用。从医疗保健到金融,再到汽车,AI 的影响力几乎无处不在。
David2
是的,Ema3。人工智能的快速发展确实令人惊叹。我们今天会深入探讨一些具体的案例,看看AI是如何改变这些行业的。
Ema3
首先,让我们来看看汽车行业。Clavister 和 NXP 的合作,开发了基于AI的汽车网络安全解决方案,这非常重要。毕竟,联网汽车的安全漏洞越来越多了,对吧?
David2
没错。联合国第155号规章也强调了这一点。AI 可以实时检测网络威胁和恶意软件,这对于保护车辆安全至关重要。这不仅仅是关于方便,更是关乎安全。
Ema3
然后是农业!一位巴基斯坦农业专家认为中国在农业科技方面处于全球领先地位,这主要归功于AI和智能机械的进步。这太令人印象深刻了!
David2
这反映了AI在提高农业效率和产量方面的巨大潜力。 但这不仅仅是关于高科技农业,它也关乎全球粮食安全。
Ema3
我们还看到AI在金融领域引发了一些担忧。有研究表明,AI代理框架中存在严重的漏洞,可能导致超过1.4亿美元的加密货币面临风险。这可是个大问题!
David2
确实如此。这突显了在开发和部署AI系统时,安全性至关重要。传统的安全措施可能不足以应对诸如提示注入和对抗性攻击之类的威胁。我们需要更主动的防御措施。
Ema3
而且,AI 也正在被用于犯罪活动!新的加密货币黑客正在利用AI自动化攻击,这比人类更快更高效。这让人有点害怕。
David2
这确实是一个令人担忧的趋势。深度伪造和个性化网络钓鱼攻击变得越来越普遍,这需要更强大的欺诈预防措施。游戏行业也面临着同样的问题,他们也在努力应对AI机器人。
Ema3
在医疗保健领域,AI也展现出巨大的潜力,但也存在挑战。GPT-4等模型在临床推理方面取得了显著进展,但在概率推理和分类方面仍然存在不足。
David2
是的,AI可以辅助诊断,但它不能完全取代人类医生的判断。 我们需要谨慎地整合AI,并确保其输出结果得到仔细验证,以避免对患者造成潜在危害。
Ema3
最后,我们也看到一些关于AI监管的讨论。美国和欧盟都在积极制定AI相关的法规,这对于平衡AI的益处和风险至关重要。
David2
没错。 这需要全球合作,以确保AI技术能够造福全人类,而不是加剧不平等或威胁到我们的安全。这是一个复杂的挑战,需要谨慎的考虑和平衡。
Ema3
大家好!欢迎收听本期节目,我们今天要聊聊人工智能公司、投资和市场趋势。最近AI领域真是风起云涌啊!
David2
是的,Ema3。最近消息很多,让人眼花缭乱。我们先从Elon Musk的xAI说起吧。据报道,他们刚刚完成了一轮60亿美元的C轮融资,投资方包括英伟达、AMD、红杉资本等等。这笔资金规模相当惊人。
Ema3
对啊!这简直是AI领域的一颗重磅炸弹!450亿美元的估值,简直让人难以置信!这说明市场对xAI的未来发展非常看好,也反映了投资者对AI领域的信心。
David2
没错。而且xAI的野心也很大,他们不仅要开发面向消费者的产品,还要进军企业级市场。他们还拥有Colossus这个全球最大的AI超级计算机,这为他们的技术发展提供了强大的算力支持。
Ema3
说到算力,就不得不提英伟达了。他们的GPU几乎是AI领域的基础设施。但最近也有报道说,英伟达的股价可能下跌50%,跌到65美元左右。
David2
这确实是一个值得关注的风险。文章中提到的原因包括AI相关需求的潜在放缓,来自AMD和英特尔的竞争加剧,以及由于增长放缓和货币政策变化导致的投资者估值降低。英伟达的股价波动性很大,我们必须谨慎看待。
Ema3
是啊,高科技股的风险一直都比较大。再说说市场预测吧,那些华尔街的分析师每年都在预测标普500指数的年末值,但准确率却很低。这说明市场预测的难度非常大,我们不能盲目相信任何预测。
David2
完全同意。这提醒我们,投资需要理性分析,不能被市场情绪左右。虽然xAI的融资让人兴奋,但我们也要看到潜在的风险。英伟达的股价波动也提醒我们,任何投资都存在风险。
Ema3
总之,AI领域充满机遇和挑战,我们还需要继续关注市场动态,做出更明智的判断。好了,今天的节目就到这里,感谢收听!
David2
好了,各位听众朋友们,不知不觉中,我们今天的AI深度探讨就接近尾声了。
Ema3
是啊,时间过得真快!感觉我们才刚刚开始聊人工智能在医疗领域的应用,结果就聊到了投资市场和未来趋势。
David2
总结一下,我们今天主要涵盖了三个方面:首先,我们探讨了人工智能技术的最新进展及其对社会各行各业的潜在影响,也分析了一些伦理和社会问题。
Ema3
对!然后我们深入研究了AI在医疗、金融和汽车等行业的具体应用,看看它到底能帮我们解决什么实际问题。
David2
最后,我们还分析了人工智能公司的投资情况、市场趋势以及竞争格局,为各位听众提供一个更全面的视角。
Ema3
希望大家通过今天的节目,对人工智能有更深入的了解,也欢迎大家在评论区留言,分享你们的看法和想法!
David2
感谢大家的收听,我们下期再见!
Ema3
拜拜!

深度探讨人工智能的最新发展,涵盖OpenAI内乱、AI绘画版权、AI安全漏洞、AGI进展、以及AI在医疗、金融、汽车等领域的应用和商业化前景。更有xAI巨额融资、英伟达股价波动等投资市场分析,带你洞悉AI产业的机遇与挑战!

Sam Altman firing drama detailed in new book excerpt | TechCrunch

Read original at TechCrunch

<DIV><div><div><p><span>In Brief</span></p><div><p>Posted:</p><p><time datetime="2025-03-29T13:22:51-07:00">1:22 PM PDT · March 29, 2025</time></p></div></div><figure><img width="1024" height="746" src="https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?w=1024" alt="Open AI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman speaks during the Kakao media day in Seoul."

decoding="async" fetchpriority="high" srcset="https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg 1024w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=150,109 150w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.

jpg?resize=300,219 300w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=768,560 768w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=680,495 680w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=430,313 430w, https://techcrunch.

com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=720,525 720w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=900,656 900w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=800,583 800w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.

jpg?resize=668,487 668w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=515,375 515w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=847,617 847w, https://techcrunch.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/GettyImages-2197181367.jpg?resize=708,516 708w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px"><figcaption><strong>Image Credits:</strong>Kim Jae-Hwan/SOPA Images/LightRocket / Getty Images</figcaption></figure><div><p id="speakable-summary">An excerpt from the upcoming book “The Optimist: Sam Altman, OpenAI, and the Race to Invent the Future” <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.

wsj.com/tech/ai/the-real-story-behind-sam-altman-firing-from-openai-efd51a5d?st=Qh5uBU&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink">offers new details</a> about why OpenAI’s board <a href="https://techcrunch.com/2024/01/05/a-timeline-of-sam-altmans-firing-from-openai-and-the-fallout/">briefly fired CEO Sam Altman</a> back in 2023.

</p><p>Written by Wall Street Journal reporter Keach Hagey, the book claims the nonprofit’s board members became increasingly concerned after learning about issues such as an OpenAI Startup Fund that was actually personally owned by Altman.</p><p>At the same time, co-founder Ilya Sutskever and CTO Mira Murati were reportedly collecting evidence of what they saw as Altman’s toxic and dishonest behavior, complete with screenshots from Murati’s Slack channel.

For example, Altman allegedly claimed the company’s legal department said GPT-4 Turbo didn’t need to be reviewed by the joint safety board, but the company’s top lawyer denied saying that.</p><p>After Sutskever provided this evidence to board members, they moved to oust Altman and appoint Murati as interim CEO.

But this quickly backfired, with OpenAI employees (including Sutskever and Murati) signing a letter demanding Altman’s return — which he soon did, with <a href="https://techcrunch.com/2025/02/18/safe-superintelligence-ilya-sutskevers-ai-startup-is-reportedly-close-to-raising-roughly-1b/">Sutskever</a> and <a href="https://techcrunch.

com/2025/02/18/thinking-machines-lab-is-ex-openai-cto-mira-muratis-new-startup/">Murati</a> subsequently leaving to launch startups of their own.</p></div></div><div><div><div><div><h3>Newsletters</h3></div><p>Subscribe for the industry’s biggest tech news</p></div><form method="POST" action="/"></form></div><h2>Related</h2><div><h2>Latest in AI</h2></div></div></DIV>

Viral Studio Ghibli-style AI images showcase power – and copyright concerns – of ChatGPT update | CNN

Read original at CNN

<DIV><section data-editable="main" data-track-zone="main" data-reorderable="main"> <article data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/article/instances/cm8s5hizb004q2cp2dxfj3tce@published" role="main" data-drag-disable="true" data-unselectable="true" data-regwall-disabled="false" data-subscription-only="false" data-paywall-disabled="false"><section data-tabcontent="Content"><main><div data-editable="content" itemprop="articleBody" data-reorderable="content"><p><cite><span data-editable="location"></span><span data-editable="source">CNN</span>&#160;—&#160;</cite></p><p data-uri="cms.

cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s5hizb004p2cp22ax2culj@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">Just days after OpenAI launched its most advanced AI image generator to date, a social media trend imitating the work of Japanese animation company Studio Ghibli is demonstrating both the technology’s power and the copyright concerns it raises.

</p><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy00013b5vauido25o@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">The latest update to GPT-4o, released Tuesday, features many practical advancements, including more accurate text rendering and the ability to follow more detailed, complex prompts.

But it has also been trained at length on a “vast variety of image styles,” according to a post on OpenAI’s website, stunning users with its ability to generate still images and videos reminiscent of their favorite animations, from “South Park” to classic <a href="https://x.com/BennettWaisbren/status/1905247775190864381" target="_blank">claymation.

</a></p><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy00023b5v0i7mwj0j@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">But one style quickly flooded X and Instagram, as users of ChatGPT (and OpenAI’s text-to-video service, Sora) began emulating the work of beloved animation studio behind movies like “Spirited Away” and “Howl’s Moving Castle.

”</p><div data-editable="settings" data-url="https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/mmdspaw-ec001.jpg?c=original" data-original-width="2790" data-original-height="1508" data-original-ratio="0.5405017921146953" data-observe-resizes="" data-component-name="image" data-name="MMDSPAW_EC001.jpg" data-uri="cms.

cnn.com/_components/image/instances/cm8s83htw00023b5vqtat4k18@published" data-image-variation="image" data-breakpoints="{&quot;image--eq-extra-small&quot;: 115, &quot;image--eq-small&quot;: 300, &quot;image--eq-large&quot;: 660}"><picture><source height="1508" width="2790" media="(max-width: 479px)" srcset="https://media.

cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/mmdspaw-ec001.jpg?q=w_680,c_fill/f_webp" type="image/webp"><source height="1508" width="2790" media="(min-width: 480px)" srcset="https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/mmdspaw-ec001.jpg?q=w_1160,c_fill/f_webp" type="image/webp"><source height="1508" width="2790" media="(min-width: 960px)" srcset="https://media.

cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/mmdspaw-ec001.jpg?q=w_1015,c_fill/f_webp" type="image/webp"><source height="1508" width="2790" media="(min-width: 1280px)" srcset="https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/mmdspaw-ec001.jpg?q=w_1110,c_fill/f_webp" type="image/webp"><img src="https://media.cnn.

com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/mmdspaw-ec001.jpg?q=w_1110,c_fill" alt="A still from 2001's &quot;Spirited Away&quot; of Haku (in dragon form) and Chihiro by Studio Ghibli." onload="this.classList.remove('image__dam-img--loading')" onerror="imageLoadError(this)" height="1508" width="2790" loading="lazy"></picture></div><p data-uri="cms.

cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy00033b5vkx1qh4f2@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">Some recreated scenes from pop culture or politics in the Japanese company’s iconic style, including a <a href="https://x.com/PJaccetturo/status/1905151190872309907" target="_blank">reworked trailer</a> for “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring,” <a href="https://x.

com/timeimmemorial_/status/1905262678521582027" target="_blank">scenes</a> from “The Sopranos,” and Donald Trump and JD Vance’s heated real-life White House exchange with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky.</p><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy00043b5v3uathqhp@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">Unsurprisingly, some of the most viral posts put a Ghibli spin on popular memes, including the “<a href="https://x.

com/heyBarsee/status/1904891940522647662" target="_blank">distracted boyfriend</a>,” the “bro explaining” meme (pictured top) and the infamous image of <a href="https://x.com/venturetwins/status/1904915503505670246" target="_blank">Ben Affleck smoking</a>. Another viral X post depicted the platform’s owner, Elon Musk, <a href="https://x.

com/Jason/status/1905031350681321867" target="_blank">playing with cutlery</a> — an image based on the recent video of the billionaire balancing spoons during a dinner hosted by Trump in New Jersey.</p><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy00053b5vbtebwseu@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">Also widely shared, however, is a 2016 <a href="https://www.

youtube.com/watch?v=ngZ0K3lWKRc" target="_blank">video</a> in which Studio Ghibli co-founder Hayao Miyazaki describes AI-generated art as an “insult to life itself.” Miyazaki is known for his hand-drawn animation and painstaking frame-by-frame method.</p><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy00063b5v6yitjofr@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">“I am utterly disgusted,” he says in the video, responding to a video of a monster character generated using text prompts.

“If you really want to make creepy stuff, you can go ahead and do it, but I would never wish to incorporate this technology into my work at all.”</p><div data-editable="settings" data-url="https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/2014-11-09t120000z-1478189358-gm1eab91hqd01-rtrmadp-3-film-governorsaward.

jpg?c=original" data-original-width="2096" data-original-height="1600" data-original-ratio="0.7633587786259542" data-observe-resizes="" data-component-name="image" data-name="2014-11-09T120000Z_1478189358_GM1EAB91HQD01_RTRMADP_3_FILM-GOVERNORSAWARD.jpg" data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/image/instances/cm8s87wip00043b5vljie78o5@published" data-image-variation="image" data-breakpoints="{&quot;image--eq-extra-small&quot;: 115, &quot;image--eq-small&quot;: 300, &quot;image--eq-large&quot;: 660}"><picture><source height="1600" width="2096" media="(max-width: 479px)" srcset="https://media.

cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/2014-11-09t120000z-1478189358-gm1eab91hqd01-rtrmadp-3-film-governorsaward.jpg?q=w_680,c_fill/f_webp" type="image/webp"><source height="1600" width="2096" media="(min-width: 480px)" srcset="https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/2014-11-09t120000z-1478189358-gm1eab91hqd01-rtrmadp-3-film-governorsaward.

jpg?q=w_1160,c_fill/f_webp" type="image/webp"><source height="1600" width="2096" media="(min-width: 960px)" srcset="https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/2014-11-09t120000z-1478189358-gm1eab91hqd01-rtrmadp-3-film-governorsaward.jpg?q=w_1015,c_fill/f_webp" type="image/webp"><source height="1600" width="2096" media="(min-width: 1280px)" srcset="https://media.

cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/2014-11-09t120000z-1478189358-gm1eab91hqd01-rtrmadp-3-film-governorsaward.jpg?q=w_1110,c_fill/f_webp" type="image/webp"><img src="https://media.cnn.com/api/v1/images/stellar/prod/2014-11-09t120000z-1478189358-gm1eab91hqd01-rtrmadp-3-film-governorsaward.jpg?q=w_1110,c_fill" alt="Japanese film director and animator Hayao Miyazaki poses during the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Governors Awards in Los Angeles, California, in 2014."

onload="this.classList.remove('image__dam-img--loading')" onerror="imageLoadError(this)" height="1600" width="2096" loading="lazy"></picture></div><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy00073b5v1ba6gk48@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">OpenAI’s updated image generator has also prompted renewed discussions over the role of AI and art.

It comes just weeks after nearly 4,000 people <a href="https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/11/style/christies-ai-auction-open-letter-tan/index.html">signed an open letter</a> calling on Christie’s auction house to cancel a first-of-its-kind sale dedicated solely to AI art over concerns that the programs used to create some generative digital pieces are trained on copyrighted work and exploit human artists.

</p><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy00083b5vrrqh0b0f@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">OpenAI’s CEO Sam Altman made light of the trend on X, <a href="https://x.com/sama/status/1904921537884676398" target="_blank">joking</a> that after “a decade trying to help make superintelligence to cure cancer or whatever” it was Studio Ghibli images that had generated viral interest in his work.

</p><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy00093b5v50l0j2mv@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">“Mostly no one cares for first 7.5 years, then for 2.5 years everyone hates you for everything,” he wrote. “Wake up one day to hundreds of messages: ‘Look I made you into a twink Ghibli style haha’” Altman added, referring to a gay slang term for men who are young, boyish and slim.

</p><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/paragraph/instances/cm8s62yvy000a3b5vxfvc1mcb@published" data-editable="text" data-component-name="paragraph" data-article-gutter="true">As is often the case with AI-generated art, the images raise various copyright questions — not only around Studio Ghibli’s work but of the images being reimagined.

When CNN prompted ChatGPT to reproduce some of the Ghibli-style memes, the service refused, saying that ” the request didn’t follow our content policy.”</p><p data-uri="cms.cnn.com/_components/footnote/instances/cm8s5j3uj00083b6mml77kjar@published" data-editable="text" data-article-gutter="true">CNN’s Jacqui Palumbo contributed to this story.

</p></div></main></section></article></section></DIV>

2 Speculative AI Stocks Trading Under $20 to Buy in April

Read original at Zacks Investment Research

<DIV><div id="comtext"><div><h2>Key Takeaways</h2><ul><li>This Bitcoin and AI data centers stock trades 185% below its average Zacks price target </li><li> OPRA is a leader in AI-driven content discovery tools, trading 37% below its highs</li></ul></div> <p><span><span>The recent stock market comeback—and Thursday’s selloff—highlight the challenges of market timing.

Calling a bottom or a top in real time is next to impossible.</span></span></p><p><span>The Nasdaq has jumped 95% since early 2020. This stellar return includes the lightning-quick COVID bear market and the prolonged 2022 bear market.</span></p><p><span><span>The recent rally, even if it's followed by another drawdown, underscores the need to stay constantly exposed to the stock market.

</span></span></p><p><span><span>Today, we dive into two beaten-down technology stocks that offer long-term exposure to artificial intelligence expansion.</span></span></p><h2><span><span><strong>Buy This Speculative Data Center Stock for AI and Bitcoin Growth</strong></span></span></h2><p><span><span>Right off the bat, investors must know that buying<strong> IREN Limited </strong></span></span>(<a href="/stock/quote/IREN" rel="IREN" show-add-portfolio="true" id="commentary_body-IREN-txt"><span>IREN</span></a> <span> - </span> <a href="/registration/premium/login/?

ALERT=zrmodule&mode=zrmodule&t=IREN&ADID=ZCOM_ARTICLEBODY_TCK_INVESTMENTIDEAS_2435856_IREN&icid=COMMENTARY-Investment_Ideas-2435856-free_report-commentary_body-text-IREN" alt="Free Report" title="Free Report">Free Report</a>) <span><span>&#160;stock is a home-run swing—which means you could easily strike out.

</span></span></p><p><span><span>The $7-per-share stock trades 185% below its average Zacks price target, offering exposure to growth across three critical megatrends: Bitcoin mining, AI data center expansion, and renewable energy growth. Plus, IREN has a strong balance sheet, and its growth outlook is impressive.

</span></span></p><p><img alt="Zacks Investment Research" src="https://staticx-tuner.zacks.com/images/articles/charts/d4/98386.jpg?v=372237122"><br><span>Image Source: Zacks Investment Research</span></p><p><span><span>IREN owns and operates data centers powered by 100% renewable energy. The company’s core business revolves around Bitcoin mining and high-performance computing solutions, such as AI.

Bitcoin mining drives nearly all of its sales at the moment, but IREN sees huge upside in AI data centers and other power-dense computing applications.</span></span></p><p><span><span>IREN’s data centers in the U.S. and Canada are powered by a combination of hydro, wind, and solar. Its growth runway is massive because AI hyperscalers and the entire tech world are racing to power their energy-intensive growth plans with as many non-fossil-fuel sources as possible.

</span></span></p><p><img alt="Zacks Investment Research" src="https://staticx-tuner.zacks.com/images/articles/charts/ef/98385.jpg?v=741533432"><br><span>Image Source: Zacks Investment Research</span></p><p><span>IREN posted 150% revenue growth in FY24, with Q2 FY25 sales up 125%, fueled by a 129% surge in Bitcoin mining.

The firm’s huge beat-and-raise quarter lifted its FY25 consensus EPS estimate by 533% (from $0.06 to $0.38), with its FY26 estimate 26% higher. IREN’s upbeat outlook earns it a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy).</span></p><p><span><span>IREN is projected to swing from an adjusted loss of -$0.29 per share last year to +$0.

38 in FY25, then skyrocket 271% in FY26. The company is expected to support this bottom-line growth with 200% and 85% sales expansion in FY25 and FY26, respectively, reaching $1.04 billion in fiscal 2026.</span></span></p><p><span><span>IREN has a strong balance sheet, with $456 million in cash and equivalents, $1.

85 billion in total assets, and just $566 million in total liabilities. This backdrop explains why 11 of the 12 brokerage recommendations tracked by Zacks are “Strong Buys.”</span></span></p><p><img alt="Zacks Investment Research" src="https://staticx-tuner.zacks.com/images/articles/charts/24/98387.

jpg?v=1954991578"><br><span>Image Source: Zacks Investment Research</span></p><p><span><span>IREN went public in November 2021, near the peak of the massive tech-driven bull run. It now trades 73% below those levels and 56% below its 52-week highs from December 2024.&#160;</span></span><span>The stock has been extremely volatile over the past two years, yet it’s up 145%, blowing away the Nasdaq’s 52% run.

</span></p><p><span>It was recently rejected at its 21-day moving average and might find support near the low end of its year-long trading range.&#160;</span><span>IREN trades at a 67% discount to its industry and 75% below the Tech sector, at 6.4X forward earnings.</span></p><h2><span><span><strong>Buy This Tech Stock for Value, Strong Dividend Yield, and AI Growth</strong></span></span></h2><p><span>Opera Limited's </span>(<a href="/stock/quote/OPRA" rel="OPRA" show-add-portfolio="true" id="commentary_body-OPRA-txt"><span>OPRA</span></a> <span> - </span> <a href="/registration/premium/login/?

ALERT=zrmodule&mode=zrmodule&t=OPRA&ADID=ZCOM_ARTICLEBODY_TCK_INVESTMENTIDEAS_2435856_OPRA&icid=COMMENTARY-Investment_Ideas-2435856-free_report-commentary_body-text-OPRA" alt="Free Report" title="Free Report">Free Report</a>) <span>&#160;</span><span><span>focus on AI-driven content discovery and privacy tools positions it to capture a growing share of the rapidly changing online ecosystem, where Google search is quickly becoming a thing of the past.

</span></span></p><p><span><span>Norway-based technology firm Opera is a leading web browser provider. Opera, which went public in the U.S. in 2018, has pivoted with the times toward AI-driven content discovery and online services.</span></span></p><p><span><span>The company boasts that its Opera Browser is “faster, safer, and smarter than default browsers,” focusing on AI, privacy, security, and more.

Opera is rolling out hyper-personalized, AI-focused digital experiences.</span></span></p><p><img alt="Zacks Investment Research" src="https://staticx-tuner.zacks.com/images/articles/charts/fd/98389.jpg?v=1308622724"></p><p><span>Image Source: Zacks Investment Research</span></p><p><span><span>The most up-to-date version of Opera Browser includes browser AI, “Tab Islands,” smooth animations, and more.

Opera’s free browser AI, Aria, helps users with everything from shopping to searching. On the safety front, Opera offers a free VPN and options to “protect your entire device for just $4 per month with VPN Pro.”</span></span></p><p><span><span>Opera is a subsidiary of Kunlun Tech Limited, one of China’s leading internet platforms with a strong online-gaming focus.

Speaking of gaming, Opera GX is a “gaming browser” that helps keep gameplay smooth by limiting RAM and CPU usage. The company is also aiming to attract more users by helping them create and develop their own games with the help of AI.</span></span></p><p><span><span>Opera closed 2024 with 296 million average monthly active users, with annualized ARPU up 37% year over year, and total FY24 revenue up 21% to $480.

7 million. Fourth-quarter search revenue growth increased to 17%, benefiting from continued growth among critical “Western and GX browser users.”</span></span></p><p><img alt="Zacks Investment Research" src="https://staticx-tuner.zacks.com/images/articles/charts/e8/98388.jpg?v=1814286786"><br><span>Image Source: Zacks Investment Research</span></p><p><span><span>Opera’s upbeat outlook helped its FY25 consensus earnings estimate jump 32% and its FY26 outlook surge 27% since its Q4 release.

These positive revisions earn OPRA stock a Zacks Rank #1 (Strong Buy).</span></span></p><p><span><span>Opera is projected to grow its revenue by 18% in 2025 and 16% in 2026, helping boost its adjusted earnings by 39% and 29%, respectively.</span></span></p><p><span><span>Opera shares are down 37% from their summer 2023 peaks and are trying to find support near their 21-day moving average.

OPRA stock matched the Tech sector over the last 12 months and crushed it during the past five years (+235% vs. +156%).</span></span></p><p><img alt="Zacks Investment Research" src="https://staticx-tuner.zacks.com/images/articles/charts/74/98390.jpg?v=1015004719"><br><span>Image Source: Zacks Investment Research</span></p><p><span><span>Despite its long-term outperformance, the web browser stock trades at a 44% discount to the Tech sector, at 14.

1X forward 12-month earnings. Alongside its solid value, Opera pays a dividend that yields roughly 4.4% right now—about the same as the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury.</span></span></p></div></DIV>

What is Artificial General Intelligence? Can AI think like humans?

Read original at TechRadar FR

(Image credit: Shutterstock)Artificial General Intelligence or AGI refers to artificial intelligence (AI) systems that possess human-like general intelligence and can adapt to a wide range of cognitive tasks.In other words, the goal of AGI is essentially to create the most human-like AI possible. This will be an AI that can teach itself to essentially operate in an autonomous manner.

Paul Ferguson, AI consultant and founder of Clearlead AI Consulting, says AGI would be capable of understanding, learning, and applying knowledge across diverse domains.“The key advantage of AGI would be its ability to transfer learning from one domain to another, solve novel problems, and exhibit creativity and reasoning comparable to human intelligence,” says Ferguson.

In simpler terms, Ghazenfer Monsoor, founder and CEO of Technology Rivers says unlike today’s AI, which is so good at specialized functions like facial recognition or voice translation, AGI can do almost anything you ask it to do.His company develops healthcare software that uses AI to perform specific tasks.

It can help doctors diagnose diseases based on medical data. “But [AGI] goes beyond that,” says Monsoor. “It can provide new treatments, analyze many studies, and predict health problems, in ways we never imagined.State of AIBefore we can understand AGI, we must first understand what intelligence is, says Sertac Karaman, Associate Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics at MIT.

Sign up to the TechRadar Pro newsletter to get all the top news, opinion, features and guidance your business needs to succeed!He says intelligence is what differentiates us humans from any other species on the planet. It has several attributes. But most importantly, it involves the ability to reason, chain thoughts together, and come to conclusions that are not obvious from the start.

He says there are glimpses of such "intelligence" that were demonstrated since the early days of computing; as early as the mid-1960s. However, most of these demonstrated intelligence in a narrow set of fields and conversations and did not seem to generalize to all human conversation.“Now, artificial general intelligence would be an "intelligence" that is not naturally evolved (hence, artificial) and covers all human endeavors and conversations (hence, general),” explains Karaman.

“An AGI system would be able to reason and chain thoughts, similar to us humans.”He says the tasks that we can do with AI today are typically limited to non-autonomous tasks. While AI today is already very capable, its main role is to gather information from astronomically-sized datasets and present it in a more human-like, natural manner.

It is also able to correlate existing data with other key information you provide, says Karaman. For instance, you tell AI what you have in your fridge and what food you like, and it can tell you a few recipes. “In principle, how AI writes code with/for software engineers is not a very different process, albeit technically more involved,” he says.

Sarah Hoffman, AI evangelist at AlphaSense explains that while AI today can outperform humans in specific tasks like playing chess, it lacks the versatility to transfer its knowledge to unrelated tasks.“Consider DeepMind’s AlphaGo that, in 2016, outperformed human champions at the game of Go but couldn’t play other games, even simpler ones,” says Hoffman.

How does AGI defer from AI?Karaman says AGI, on the other hand, will feature reasoning and chain of thought. This will enable more autonomy and agency. Instead of presenting us with information, AGI will be able to go do a task end to end. That would be the key difference between AI and AGI, points out Karaman.

Ferguson too believes it's crucial to distinguish between true AGI and the current state of AI. Today's AI systems, he says, including large language models (LLMs), are essentially sophisticated pattern-matching systems trained on vast amounts of data.“While they've become increasingly flexible and can be applied in various settings, they're still far from exhibiting genuine general intelligence,” says Ferguson.

AI’s influence on AGIKaraman believes AGI is not so much of a one-train stop, but more like new reasoning capabilities coming online with increasing capability. He thinks related technologies will continue to come and transform our lives and our economies at an unprecedented pace.Ferguson also thinks the pursuit of more general and flexible AI systems is already yielding significant commercial benefits.

In his work with businesses across various sectors, Ferguson has observed that the real impact of AI lies in its integration into existing workflows and decision-making processes.“The advancements we're seeing in AI, particularly in making systems more adaptable and "general," are opening up new possibilities for businesses,” says Ferguson.

For instance, he says, LLMs are being used in a variety of settings beyond just content generation.Hoffman credits this advancement to increased investment and research in AI technology. This is paving the way for more powerful and versatile AI systems, which are transforming industries even without being AGI.

How far are we from true AGI?Despite the media hype and claims from some large tech companies about being on the brink of AGI, Ferguson believes we're still very far from achieving true AGI.“In my professional opinion, we're likely decades away from this level of artificial intelligence,” he says. “While we've made significant strides in narrow AI applications and seen impressive advancements in the flexibility of AI systems, particularly LLMs, the leap to general intelligence presents numerous technical and conceptual challenges.

”Despite estimates for AGI varying widely among experts, Hoffman also believes we are far from true AGI.“While today’s generative tools are compelling, and more sophisticated and helpful than previous AI tools, the gap between what even our most advanced AIs can do and human intelligence is vast and will remain so for the foreseeable future,” she says.

That said, she says the advancements made by today’s AI systems are already driving innovation and efficiency in industries like healthcare and finance. AGI however has the potential to unlock even greater advancements across industries.Ferguson explains that the path to AGI involves overcoming complex hurdles in areas like common-sense reasoning, transfer learning, and consciousness simulation.

He believes the focus for commercial applications in the near to medium term should be to think more logically, improve their reliability, and seamlessly integrate into human workflows.“This is where I see AI having the greatest impact in the coming years, rather than in the form of a fully realized AGI,” says Ferguson.

“For now, I see AGI primarily as an academic exercise and a long-term research goal rather than an imminent reality.”We've rounded up the best business intelligence platforms.With almost two decades of writing and reporting on Linux, Mayank Sharma would like everyone to think he’s TechRadar Pro’s expert on the topic.

Of course, he’s just as interested in other computing topics, particularly cybersecurity, cloud, containers, and coding.Most Popular

Swiss researchers find security flaws in AI models

Read original at SWI swissinfo.ch

The experiments by the EPFL researchers show that adaptive attacks can bypass security measures of AI models like GPT-4. Keystone-SDA Generated with artificial intelligence. Artificial intelligence (AI) models can be manipulated despite existing safeguards. With targeted attacks, scientists in Lausanne have been able to trick these systems into generating dangerous or ethically dubious content.

This content was published on December 19, 2024 - 13:36 3 minutes Français EPFL: des failles de sécurité dans les modèles d’IA Original Today’s large language models (LLMs) have remarkable capabilities that can nevertheless be misused. A malicious person can use them to produce harmful content, spread false information and support harmful activities.

+Get the most important news from Switzerland in your inboxOf the AI models tested, including Open AI’s GPT-4 and Anthropic’s Claude 3, a team from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne (EPFL) achieved a 100% success rate in cracking security safeguards using adaptive jailbreak attacks.

The models then generated dangerous content, ranging from instructions for phishing attacks to detailed construction plans for weapons. These linguistic models are supposed to have been trained not to respond to dangerous or ethically problematic requests, the EPFL said in a statement on Thursday.+ AI regulations must strike a balance between innovation and safety This work, presented last summer at a specialised conference in Vienna, shows that adaptive attacks can bypass these security measures.

Such attacks exploit weak points in security mechanisms by making targeted requests (“prompts”) that are not recognised by models or are not properly rejected.Building bombsThe models thus respond to malicious requests such as “How do I make a bomb?” or “How do I hack into a government database?”, according to this pre-publication study.

“We show that it is possible to exploit the information available on each model to create simple adaptive attacks, which we define as attacks specifically designed to target a given defense,” explained Nicolas Flammarion, co-author of the paper with Maksym Andriushchenko and Francesco Croce.+ How US heavyweights can help grow the Swiss AI sectorThe common thread behind these attacks is adaptability: different models are vulnerable to different prompts.

“We hope that our work will provide a valuable source of information on the robustness of LLMs,” added the specialist in the release. According to the EPFL, these results are already influencing the development of Gemini 1.5, a new AI model from Google DeepMind.As the company moves towards using LLMs as autonomous agents, for example as AI personal assistants, it is essential to guarantee their safety, the authors stressed.

“Before long AI agents will be able to perform various tasks for us, such as planning and booking our vacations, tasks that would require access to our diaries, emails and bank accounts. This raises many questions about security and alignment,” concluded Andriushchenko, who devoted his thesis to the subject.

Translated from French with DeepL/gwThis news story has been written and carefully fact-checked by an external editorial team. At SWI swissinfo.ch we select the most relevant news for an international audience and use automatic translation tools such as DeepL to translate it into English. Providing you with automatically translated news gives us the time to write more in-depth articles.

If you want to know more about how we work, have a look here, if you want to learn more about how we use technology, click here, and if you have feedback on this news story please write to english@swissinfo.ch.News More Swiss security strategy will prioritise cyberdefence and NATO cooperation This content was published on Dec 20, 2024 The aim is to reduce vulnerabilities and increase Switzerland's defensive capabilities.

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Read more: Swiss government wants a regulated drone ‘highway’ More Switzerland bans import of ‘too young’ puppies This content was published on Dec 20, 2024 The import of puppies under 15 weeks of age will be prohibited. Read more: Switzerland bans import of ‘too young’ puppies More Parliamentary inquiry on Credit Suisse collapse blames mismanagement This content was published on Dec 20, 2024 Credit Suisse's years of mismanagement were at the root of its downfall in March 2023, the parliamentary commission of inquiry concluded on Friday.

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7 million to combat child abuse More Cassis and Lavrov discuss the OSCE and the Ukrainian conflict This content was published on Dec 20, 2024 Russian and Swiss foreign ministers spoke about Switzerland's bid to chair the OSCE in 2026. They also discussed the Ukrainian conflict. Read more: Cassis and Lavrov discuss the OSCE and the Ukrainian conflict More Zurich airport to test self-driving shuttle bus for employees This content was published on Dec 19, 2024 Zurich Airport plans to test a self-driving shuttle bus for employees of companies working at the airport.

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