generative

Living guidelines for generative artificial intelligence are needed by scientists

Stanford researchers have released guidelines for regulating generative AI, as part of the ‘Generative Artificial Intelligence (HeLMA) Living Guidelines’ initiative. Researchers should always acknowledge and specify for which tasks they have used AI in (scientific) research publications or presentations. The independent scientific auditor should have access to a portal where users who discover biased or inaccurate responses can report them.

More than 1,600 researchers weighed in on artificial intelligence and science

A survey by Nature found that nearly 40% of the scientists who studied Artificial Intelligence said that they used it directly. Those who use AI in other fields tended to be more worried by a lack of skilled scientists and training resources. The survey also revealed that 28% of those who studied AI said that they used generative AI products every day or more than once a week.

Getty Images enters therative artificial intelligence pool

Getty Images has launched a generative AI tool called Generative AI that uses images from over 20 years of Getty photographers’ experience. Customers can access the tool through Getty Images’ website. The company said that users will have the right to perpetual, worldwide, nonexclusive use of the images and that new content generated by AI will not be added into Getty’s existing content libraries.