Monday, November 11, 2024

Google Chrome’s New AI Is Here to Make Your Browsing Safer and Smarter

Tech giant Google just silently updated one of Chrome’s security features called Enhanced Protection. This will now be powered by AI technology and will arrive in a future update.

For now, it’s not too clear what has altered. However, from what was mentioned by one researcher Leopeva64 on the X app, Google is making the change to the Chrome Safe Browsing feature. Soon, we’ll see it powered with AI to give greater protection in real-time. This means saying hello to enhanced security against dangers online and also keeping downloads and extensions safe.


In the past, we used to see the feature be better known as a more proactive protection. It’s not altered to include AI to better protect and warn others about dangers linked to harmful platforms. This is the case even for those places that the Chrome browser failed to identify in the past.

With this new enhanced protection switched on, Chrome would like to take part in scanning on a deeper level with more downloads and better protection across all of Google’s services when users sign in. However, this might involve increased data collection from users' browsing activity, as Chrome deepens its scanning efforts.

In other news, Chrome’s Enhanced Protection is not the only feature getting the AI makeover across Chrome. As shown by Leo, Tabs on Chrome Canary will also get a revamp. Before, they would arrive with suggestions to ‘Check for Suggestions’. Now, it’s going to be called Group Tabs with AI which assists in organizing tabs with AI to ensure they’re better sorted.

Meanwhile, another similar change is the Close Unused Tabs feature. It’s going to be called Review Inactive Tabs. Instead of just shutting down the tabs, the offering allows users to review them, in case they’re inactive for a week or more.

For now, the search engine giant is still in the testing phase for all of these AI branding changes on Chrome Canary. But we do hope to see this rolling out to anyone and everyone very soon.

Read next: X Expands Grok AI Access to Non-Paying Users, Testing New Paths for Growth and Engagement
by Dr. Hura Anwar via Digital Information World

X Expands Grok AI Access to Non-Paying Users, Testing New Paths for Growth and Engagement

Social media giant X is making a bigger push for its Grok AI chatbot, giving some non-paying users full access.

While the process is still in the developmental phase, it does hope to launch the limited but free version to more users very soon. As expected, this would significantly boost the usage of the popular AI tool.

Image: Lohan Simpson / X

For now, a limited number of people have access to it, and those that do belong to the Premium category of subscribers. Today, there are just 1.3M users who pay for the app which is just 0.26% of the overall user base. This is evidence that usage is very limited.

Therefore, there are also not a lot of insights in terms of how valuable this addition could be as the usage is limited to a tiny fraction of the whole audience. Moreover, a free variant would give those who didn’t get access before the chance to try now. What better way to lure users into signing up for Premium than this, right?

It also depends on the number of people keenly interested in adding pictures to their posts or replying through answers generated via the AI chatbot. We will only know after this decision comes into play. It would provide a correct assessment of the real potential that it holds after getting feedback from the masses.
We could also see how this might assist X Corp attain a major investment into the xAI offshoot.

xAI was Elon Musk’s answer of revenge to OpenAI which he played a major role in terms of its initial stages. This was right before he was kicked out of the leadership team. Hence, Musk thought the perfect way to take revenge was this.

It’s a key challenger for rivals and already attained nearly $6B in terms of funding. There are also views about the app propping up itself and signing deals related to data supply with the app. This could funnel some of the funds between the two of them.

A lot of the success of xAI has to do with the platform itself. Now, that still struggles in terms of getting business to where its leader had once imagined it to be. Therefore, it’s a smart move if you ask us.

Read next: New Study Shows Generative AI Hallucinates When it Faces Real World Problems
by Dr. Hura Anwar via Digital Information World

Sunday, November 10, 2024

New Study Shows Generative AI Hallucinates When it Faces Real World Problems

According to a new study by researchers from Harvard University, University of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), University of Chicago and Cornell University, AI models are highly likely to hallucinate if you give them real life scenarios. One example of it is asking an AI model to navigate New York. It can do so with excellent accuracy but if we add detours and close some streets, it starts hallucinating and imagining things. This shows that AI models can show great capabilities in doing daily tasks but they do not have any understanding of real life scenarios.

For the study, the backbone of many LLMs, “transporter”, was analyzed. When a lot of detours were added to New York’s map, the transporter failed miserably. If only 1% of the street was closed, the accuracy decreases from 100 to 67.

According to MIT, this hallucination of an AI model made the map of New York start looking like a made-up map where there was no sense of streets and flyovers. The researchers also said that these results were just for navigation as the same type of hallucination was also seen in games and puzzles. The paper says that AI models aren't reliable in solving real world problems as sometimes they say things that do not make sense at all.

Image: DIW-Aigen

Read next: Small Businesses Slash Budgets Amid Inflation, 52% of Consumers Reduce Spending
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World

Small Businesses Slash Budgets Amid Inflation, 52% of Consumers Reduce Spending

According to a study from Constant Contact and Ascend2, most of the small business owners are cutting back on their expenses because of rising inflation. 46% out of 16,00 small business owners and marketers who were surveyed said that they are impacted from the inflation and that's why they are budgeting their expenses accordingly.

The respondents of the survey also said that they have increased their prices due to inflation (39%). Other measures these small business owners have taken to mitigate inflation are improving operational efficiency (24%), focusing on customer retention and loyalty programs (22%) and diversifying new products and services (19%). These are measures taken by SMBs (firms with 250 or less than 250 employees).

52% of the consumers also said that they have cut off their spendings at small businesses this year because of inflation. 10% said that they have increased their spendings to help support small businesses. 34% said that they spend the same amount as before even amidst this inflation and 4% consumers do not spend on small businesses at all.

The SMBs with 2-10 employees are more impacted with this inflation. 51% of the small businesses with 2-10 employees have cut their expenses and 41% of SMBs with 11-99 employees have increased their prices.SMBs with 100-250 employees have diversified with new products while 36% of them have focused on customer retention and loyalty programs.


Read next: Smart Creators Are Using These 2024 Tips to Make Millions—Find Out How You Can Too!
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World

76% View Journalism as Essential for Combating Misinformation, with Social Media Seen as Top Culprit

Trust is in demand. Three-quarters of Brits value trusted journalism now more than ever. Why? Fake news floods social media, government power faces little resistance, and regions are gaining new control – a reality that makes journalism indispensable.

In this survey of 2,000 people, over 70% identified social media as a breeding ground for misinformation. Not surprisingly, they want action. Nearly eight in ten believe tech firms should face hefty fines if they allow fake news. Sixty percent think advertisers should pull back, or even stop, if these platforms don’t step up.

Jo Allan, Newsworks CEO, sees this as heartening: people are waking up to journalism’s irreplaceable role in their lives. With politics topping both national and global agendas, journalism remains the check against unchecked power. And in a world where facts are blurred, credible news sources stand stronger than ever.

There's another issue: tech companies and AI. Six in ten respondents want copyright protections preserved, requiring clear permission before using journalism to train AI. Owen Meredith, NMA’s chief, believes this is a pivotal moment. Copyright laws that have fueled the UK’s creative strength must stay robust.

Following Labour’s landslide win in July, nearly two-thirds say journalism’s role in scrutinizing power grows crucial as the majority grows. And with more powers moving to local authorities, 66% of respondents see local journalism becoming essential to represent communities fairly.

This survey, by Newsworks with OnePoll, brings a simple truth to light: Britons value journalism because it holds up a mirror, a watchdog, and a steady hand in a turbulent world.


Read next: iPhone 15 Dominates Q3 2024 Sales as Apple and Samsung Compete for Premium Market Supremacy
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World

Saturday, November 9, 2024

OpenAI's Orion Won't Be the Game-Changer You Expected – Here's Why

AI has come a long way, with each new model raising the bar on what’s possible—more power, more intelligence, more ability to understand and even mimic human thought. But now, OpenAI, one of the field’s front-runners, is facing something new: progress is slowing down. Their upcoming model, Orion, isn’t expected to deliver the same jaw-dropping improvements we’ve seen in the past. Instead, it’s likely to be a smaller, more measured step forward.

Reports from early testers suggest that while Orion does show improvements, it doesn’t have the same wow factor that took us from GPT-3 to GPT-4. And in some areas, like coding, it might not be noticeably better than what’s already available. This suggests a shift—not necessarily an end to progress, but maybe a different pace, one less about massive breakthroughs and more about incremental gains.

OpenAI seems to be adapting. They’ve created a new foundations team whose job is to find ways to push AI forward, even with limits on new data to train these models. One of their big ideas is to use synthetic data—data generated by other AI models—instead of relying exclusively on vast new troves of human-created content. This approach, along with some focused fine-tuning after the main training phase, might be the key to keeping AI progress on track.

It’s a practical move, especially when the traditional playbook—more data, bigger models, faster machines—isn’t delivering the same gains it once did. For years, AI has ridden a wave of ever-expanding resources, but with limits in sight, the industry is making a choice: pursue meaningful improvements, even if they aren’t earth-shattering, rather than chasing flashy leaps that may no longer be possible.
This shift in approach doesn’t mean AI’s potential is dwindling. There’s still room to make an impact in healthcare, finance, and beyond. But the days of major jumps in capability with each release might be ending, at least for now. OpenAI hasn’t yet announced a release date for Orion and has denied any plans to launch it this year. Still, the shift toward synthetic data and targeted refinements signals a fresh kind of progress—not about being the biggest or fastest, but about becoming more efficient, more purposeful.

In many ways, this is a moment for AI to mature. Instead of relentless ambition for power, it’s about focusing on real-world impact, designing systems that are practical, ethical, and well-suited to their roles. It’s a new kind of progress—one that, perhaps, better matches the needs of the industries and people these technologies are meant to serve. And maybe, in a world so often fixated on speed, a little patience and recalibration is exactly what’s needed.


Read next: Study Reveals LinkedIn Videos Generate Five Times More Engagement Than Text Posts, Personal Flair Boosts Reach
by Asim BN via Digital Information World

Study Reveals LinkedIn Videos Generate Five Times More Engagement Than Text Posts, Personal Flair Boosts Reach

A new study by Caroline Giegerich published in Adweek finds that video posts on LinkedIn get five times more engagements than posts with only texts. Giegerich did a 90 days analysis and found that even her video with lowest engagements had three times more reach than her highest performing text posts. The average views her video posts got was 250,000 views, while her most successful video had 774,000 views on LinkedIn.

It was also analyzed what makes a video get high views on LinkedIn. According to the study, a video which was under 5 minutes got the most views. Morning posts which were posted between 9-11 AM EST also get the most views. A bit of personal flair to the videos also results in high engagements. Giegerich also said that if markeers want to build connections and get sales, video posts work the best. Once you are done with this, you can make text posts which are targeted to your network you have built on LinkedIn.

The study also highlighted how limited LinkedIn’s monetization options are. The current program has consulting opportunities and sponsored posts. The creator program by LinkedIn is restricted to only 100 participants ever since 2022 and the platform doesn't provide good incentives to creators. Giegerich says that marketers need to use a mix of videos and text posts for visibility and engagement on their account.

Image: DIW-Aigen

Read next: Smart Creators Are Using These 2024 Tips to Make Millions—Find Out How You Can Too!
by Arooj Ahmed via Digital Information World