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‘Alien: Romulus’ director defends AI version of dead actor’s likeness after fan backlash

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Bible Verses of the Day

9 In this the love of God was made manifest among us, that God sent his only Son into the world, so that we might live through him. 10 In this is love, not that we have loved God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins. [1 John 4:9-10 ESV]

What's in this week's issue?

  • 📽️ ‘Alien: Romulus’ director defends AI version of dead actor’s likeness after fan backlash

  • 🧠 New AI can ID brain patterns related to specific behavior

  • ⛅️ Easy Cloud News

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Controversy comes as new legislation regarding AI and actors is set to be signed in California soon.

Fans of the "Alien" franchise had a few concerns about the appearance of a beloved actor brought back to life by artificial intelligence. A humanoid android (dubbed a "synthetic" in the movie) named Rook bears the likeness of the late Ian Holm, who appeared in the original 1979 "Alien."

Holm also starred as Bilbo Baggins in "The Lord of the Rings" films as well as movies like "Brazil," "Chariots of Fire" and "The Fifth Element." He died in 2020 at 88. Many fans reacted to his surprise appearance and were none too thrilled.

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Maryam Shanechi, the Sawchuk Chair in Electrical and Computer Engineering and founding director of the USC Center for Neurotechnology, and her team have developed a new AI algorithm that can separate brain patterns related to a particular behavior. This work, which can improve brain-computer interfaces and discover new brain patterns, has been published in the journal Nature Neuroscience.

"Our AI algorithm, named DPAD, dissociates those brain patterns that encode a particular behavior of interest such as arm movement from all the other brain patterns that are happening at the same time," Shanechi said.

In addition to movement, this algorithm has the flexibility to potentially be used in the future to decode mental states such as pain or depressed mood. Doing so may help better treat mental health conditions by tracking a patient's symptom states as feedback to precisely tailor their therapies to their needs.

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The Gospel Coalition

Listen or read the following transcript as D.A. Carson discusses how parables were designed to both reveal and conceal truths about the Kingdom of Heaven, making them accessible to those receptive to Jesus’ message while simultaneously hiding these truths from the unreceptive, thus fulfilling prophecy and distinguishing between different responses to his teachings.

The following unedited transcript is provided by Beluga AI.

AI News

  • OpenAI unveils o1, a model that can fact-check itself (link)

  • 🖥️ Google says its quantum computer reduces errors in a major breakthrough (link)

  • 🖌️ Why comparing AI image editing to Photoshop downplays the risks (link)

  • ☃️ AI winter: A cycle of hype, disappointment, and recovery (link)

  • 🩻 MIT News: “ScribblePrompt” is an interactive AI framework to help doctors annotate medical scans (link)

AI Tools

  • 🤖 elsAi Chatbot: Optimizing customer engagement with GenAI Chatbots (link)

  • 🔗 Soshial: Supercharge your audience on Linkedin (link)

  • ✒️ CVBee: The ultimate online CV maker (link)

  • 🎨 LogoAI: Transform text to logo effortlessly (link)

  • 🐋 Beluga: Christian sermon and lecture transcripts, translations and more (link)

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