Yes those cases will be interesting. By default a lot of copyrighted content may be legal to use for training (in the US but also many other places) under what’s called fair use. The cases you’re referring to will likely reinforce this, but it isn’t known yet. Note that it’s not just OpenAI on that side of the argument but also other (non tech) organizations that believe protecting fair use here is current law and essential.
How does this compare to using Apple's iBook or Kindle reader app and then the iPhone's built in text to voice (the female British voice is pretty good).
We choose an apple watch for this reason, that way we can still call them / locate them, they are part of their friends iMessage groups, but no social media apps are possible...
We just got Apple Watches for our 11 and 13 year olds. It is a decent middle ground, as up to now we’ve been very limiting of their screen time.
Our district has strict blocks in place at school, but most kids still already have phones. We did it for that reason and so so we don’t introduce phones at the same time they start driving (which is when we figured they’d actually need it)
One thing I wasn’t quite prepared for is kids use huge group chats that result in hundreds of messages a day. Learned how to mute discussions really quick. You can also limit access to groups with parental controls.
Key is talking to your kids regularly and helping them navigate life. Real and digital.
In an early chapter he talks about how well LLMs knowing medical and legal information but doesn't mention how it makes things up... Was hoping he'd discuss the challenges and hurdles right away...
Passkeys are in 1Password. I'm authenticated into 1Password on my phone, ipad, browser extension on multiple computers. As long as I don't lose access to all devices at the same time I'm fine...
Passkeys are arguably slightly more convenient and not risky for those of us who are technically aware enough to use password managers, sure. But that's not what most people will do. Most people will see their phone ask them to add fingerprint/face unlock, so they do that, and now their passkey is stored only on their phone (or in iCloud if they're lucky).
Everyone does. This is another step towards that. The top comment says Google has been stop-and-go about this. Well the tech was never there to do it. But they never really stopped playing with the idea. Since 2013.