Google restores Naukri, 99acres, other apps after Centre's intervention | Apps – Business Standard

Google restores Naukri, 99acres, other apps after Centre's intervention | Apps – Business Standard


Taking a serious note of the issue, Vaishnaw said: “India is very clear, our policy is very clear…our startups will get the protection that they need” (Photo: Bloomberg)


Google has reinstated some popular Indian apps it had removed from its Play Store, including Naukri and 99acres, amid the government’s clear signal that the delisting of Indian apps cannot be permitted.


Sources said reinstating some of the apps was not linked to the government’s position but with the concerned apps complying with the Play Store Billing policies.


Info Edge founder Sanjeev Bikhchandani, in a post on X, confirmed that many Info Edge apps are now back in the app marketplace.


“Many of the Info Edge apps are back on the Play Store. An effort very well led by (company MD and CEO) Hitesh and the entire Info Edge team. People were up all night for this. Great crisis management,” he said.


Taking a strong view of Google pulling out some apps from its Play Store, Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw told PTI that the delisting of Indian apps cannot be permitted and that the tech company and startups concerned have been called for a meeting next week.


In an interview, IT and Telecom Minister Vaishnaw said the startup ecosystem is key to the Indian economy and their fate cannot be left to any big tech to decide.


The minister’s comments assume significance as Google on Friday began removing some apps, including popular matrimony apps, from its Play Store in India over a dispute on service fee payments, even as apps and well-known startup founders cried foul.


Taking a serious note of the issue, Vaishnaw said: “India is very clear, our policy is very clear…our startups will get the protection that they need”.


The minister said the government will meet Google and app developers, who have been delisted, next week to resolve the dispute.


“I have already called Google…I have already called the app developers, who have been delisted. We will be meeting them next week. This cannot be permitted…This kind of delisting cannot be permitted,” Vaishnaw asserted.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mar 02 2024 | 6:16 PM IST



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Meity issues advisory, asks cos to take permit before launching AI products | India News – Business Standard

Meity issues advisory, asks cos to take permit before launching AI products | India News – Business Standard


Rajeev Chandrasekhar. Photo: ANI


Ministry of Electronics and IT (Meity) on Friday issued an advisory to social media intermediaries and artificial intelligence (AI) platforms and asked them to take permission before launching AI products in the country.


Further, the ministry has also asked platforms to ensure that the biases arising out of their AI models or platforms do not hamper the electoral process in India.


“Generative AI or AI platforms available on the internet will have to take full responsibility for what the platform does, and cannot escape the accountability by saying that their platform is under-testing,” said Minister of State for electronics Rajeev Chandrasekhar.


Meity has asked all concerned platforms to submit an action taken-cum-status report to it within 15 days of the advisory. 


Google’s AI tool, Gemini, was recently criticised by the government for allegedly generating biased responses towards prime minister Narendra Modi.


The government has also asked the Intermediaries to ensure that any potentially misleading content is labelled with unique metadata or identifiers, allowing for the identification of its origin and the intermediary involved, in order to facilitate tracking of misinformation or deepfakes and their originators.


“The platforms should figure out a way of embedding a metadata or some sort of identifier for every thing that is synthetically created by their platform,” said Chandrasekhar.


Failure to adhere to it could lead to potential legal repercussions for intermediaries or platforms, including prosecution under the IT Act and other relevant criminal statutes, said the minister.


He also said, ” You don’t do that with cars or microprocessors. Why is that for such a transformative tech like AI there are no guardrails between what is in the lab and what goes out to the public.” 

 


According to the minister, all the conventional internet intermediaries and platforms that are not strictly intermediaries but have some AI embedded in it, or the digital platforms that enable the creation of deep fakes and image manipulation, will be required to comply with the advisory.


Further, companies that are hosting unreliable or under-testing AI platforms and want to create a sandbox on the internet for testing must get permission from the government and should label the platform as ‘under-testing’.


Additionally, there should also be a clear mention of the “possible and inherent fallibility or unreliability” of the output generated to the public by these platforms, which could be done through a ‘consent popup’ mechanism.


“In a lot of ways this advisory is signalling towards our future regulatory framework that is aimed at creating a safe and trusted internet,” he added.

First Published: Mar 02 2024 | 4:47 PM IST



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Google partners with news publishers to curb deepfakes ahead of elections | Lok Sabha Elections News – Business Standard

Google partners with news publishers to curb deepfakes ahead of elections | Lok Sabha Elections News – Business Standard



Ahead of the 2024 General Elections, technology major Google on Friday announced the launch of ‘Shakti, India Election Fact-Checking Collective’ – a consortium of news publishers and fact-checkers in the country, in a bid to curb the spread of online misinformation, including deepfakes.


The pan-India initiative will be led by DataLEADS, in collaboration with the Misinformation Combat Alliance and other fact checkers, with support from the Google News Initiative (GNI).


“Starting today until the conclusion of the General Elections in India, the project will focus on connecting independent fact checkers and Indian language publishers, giving them a collaborative platform to share fact checks, research resources and alerts on elections-related viral misinformation and deepfakes, saving crucial time,” Google said.


The company added that fact-checks in multiple Indian languages and formats, including videos, will be shared and amplified via partnering news publishers.


“Amidst a complex information landscape, with the elections round the corner, the Collective is a crucial intervention towards building a robust fact-checking ecosystem to safeguard the democratic processes,” said Syed Nazakat, Founder and Chief Executive Officer, DataLEADS.


In addition, the project will provide news organizations and fact-checkers essential training in advanced fact-checking methodologies, deepfake detection, and the latest Google tools like the Fact Check Explorer, to streamline verification processes.


With this launch, the Fact-Checking Collective will continue to onboard new partners and scale the effort to reach most parts of the country, Google revealed.


“The strategic partnership of the Misinformation Combat Alliance with the Google News Initiative and DataLEADS will empower different demographics, helping individuals with credible and fact-checked information at the grassroots level, so that they can make the most informed choices during the elections and beyond,” said Bharat Gupta, President, Misinformation Combat Alliance (MCA), and Chief Executive Officer, Jagran New Media.


Google claimed that, since 2018, its fact-checking collective, in addition to initiatives like the GNI India Training Network, PollCheck, Data Accelerator, and Data Dialogue, has trained over 65,000 journalists, media educators and journalism students in 15+ languages.


The company had, in October last year, also rolled out the “About this image” fact-check tool to English language users globally in Search to give people an easy way to check the credibility and context of images they see online. Using the tool, users could discover an image’s history, metadata and the context users used it with on different sites.


To strengthen fact-checking organizations worldwide, including those in India, Google and YouTube launched the $13.2 million Global Fact Check Fund which has helped to enhance the capabilities of local and regional media organizations in producing high-quality, impactful fact-checking content.

First Published: Mar 01 2024 | 5:46 PM IST



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Qualcomm to launch AI-focused Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 in October: Details here | Tech News – Business Standard

Qualcomm to launch AI-focused Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 in October: Details here | Tech News – Business Standard


American semiconductor entity Qualcomm has confirmed that it will be announcing its next-generation flagship smartphone system-on-chip (SoC), the Snapdragon 8 Gen 4, in October.

In a video shared by the company on social media platform X (formerly Twitter), Senior Vice President and Chief Marketing Officer of Qualcomm, Don McGuire said that the company plans to announce the next generation shipset at the Qualcomm summit, which is scheduled for October.

 

Apart from the launch date announcement, McGuire said that the upcoming Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 will be powered by an Oryon CPU, which is the company’s latest central processing unit. The Oryon CPU also powers the company’s Snapdragon X Elite platform, which is dedicated for PCs.

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 4 chip will also get an upgraded neural processing unit (NPU) for improving on-device AI capabilities.

At the Mobile world congress (MWC), earlier this week, Qualcomm previewed its large multimodal AI model for Android phones, powered by its Snapdragon platform. The company previewed Large Language and Vision Assistant (LLaVA), a 7+ billion parameter large multimodal model (LMM) that is capable of accepting multiple types of data inputs, on an Android smartphone. Qualcomm said that the model is multimodal and runs on-device for enhanced privacy, reliability, personalisation, and cost.

Besides LLaVa, the American semiconductor entity demonstrated Low Rank Adaptation (LoRA) running Stable Diffusion on an Android smartphone. According to the company, LoRA would allow users to create high-quality custom images on-device.


 

First Published: Mar 01 2024 | 4:42 PM IST





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AI shows prostate cancer is not just singular disease, reveals study | Health News – Business Standard

AI shows prostate cancer is not just singular disease, reveals study | Health News – Business Standard



Scientists have used artificial intelligence (AI) to reveal a new form of aggressive prostate cancer which they said could help thousands of lives by revolutionising how the disease is diagnosed and treated in the future.


The study, published in the journal Cell Genomics, reveals that prostate cancer, which affects one in eight men in their lifetime, includes two different subtypes termed evotypes.


The findings, led by researchers at the University of Oxford, and the University of Manchester, UK, could help provide tailored treatments to each individual patient according to a genetic test which will also be delivered using AI, they said.


Our research demonstrates that prostate tumours evolve along multiple pathways, leading to two distinct disease types,” said lead researcher Dan Woodcock, from the University of Oxford.


This understanding is pivotal as it allows us to classify tumours based on how the cancer evolves rather than solely on individual gene mutations or expression patterns, Woodcock said.


The researchers worked together as part of international consortium, called The Pan Prostate Cancer Group, set up by scientists at The Institute of Cancer Research (ICR) and The University of East Anglia, UK, to analyse genetic data from thousands of prostate cancer samples across nine countries.


The team’s collaboration with Cancer Research UK (CRUK) aims to develop a genetic test that, when combined with conventional staging and grading, can provide a more precise prognosis for each patient, allowing tailored treatment decisions.


The researchers used AI to study changes in the DNA of prostate cancer samples, using whole genome sequencing, from 159 patients.


They identified two distinct cancer groups among these patients using an AI technique called neural networks. These two groups were confirmed by using two other mathematical approaches applied to different aspects of the data. This finding was validated in other independent datasets from Canada and Australia.


They went on to integrate all the information to generate an evolutionary tree showing how the two subtypes of prostate cancer develop, ultimately converging into two distinct disease types termed evotypes’.


This realisation is what enables us to distinguish the disease types. This hasn’t been done before because it’s more complicated than HER2+ in breast cancer, for instance,” said Professor David Wedge of Manchester Cancer Research Centre, who led the study.


“This understanding is pivotal as it allows us to classify tumours based on their evolutionary trajectory rather than solely on individual gene mutations or expression patterns,” Wedge said.


Professor Colin Cooper, from UEA’s Norwich Medical School, highlighted that while prostate cancer is responsible for a large proportion of all male cancer deaths, it is more commonly a disease men die with rather than from.


This means that unnecessary treatment can often be avoided, sparing men from side-effects such as incontinence and impotence.


This study is really important because until now, we thought that prostate cancer was just one type of disease. But it is only now, with advancements in artificial intelligence, that we have been able to show that there are actually two different subtypes at play,” he added.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mar 01 2024 | 4:29 PM IST



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Elon Musk sues OpenAI, chief executive Sam Altman for abandoning mission | Tech News – Business Standard

Elon Musk sues OpenAI, chief executive Sam Altman for abandoning mission | Tech News – Business Standard


Sam Altman Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg


Elon Musk has sued ChatGPT-maker OpenAI and its chief executive Sam Altman, among others, saying they had abandoned the company’s original mission to develop artificial intelligence for the benefit of humanity not profit.




The lawsuit filed late on Thursday said Altman and OpenAI’s co-founder Greg Brockman originally approached Musk to make an open source, non-profit company.




The Microsoft-backed company’s focus on making money breached that contract, lawyers for Musk said in the lawsuit filed in San Francisco. They added that the company had kept the design of GPT-4, its most advanced AI model, “a complete secret”.




OpenAI, Microsoft and Musk did not immediately respond to Reuters requests for comment.




Musk co-founded OpenAI in 2015, but stepped down from its board in 2018. He also runs electric vehicle maker Tesla and rocket maker SpaceX and bought Twitter for $44 billion in October 2022.




Last year serial entrepreneur Altman was fired by OpenAI’s former board which said it was trying to defend the company’s mission to develop AI that benefits humanity. A few days later, Altman returned to the company with a new initial board.




OpenAI is planning to appoint several new board members in March, the Washington Post reported on Thursday.




ChatGPT, the chatbot from OpenAI, became the fastest-growing software application in the world within six months of its launch in November 2022. It also sparked the launch of rival chatbots from Microsoft, Alphabet and a bevy of startups that tapped the hype to secure billions in funding.

 


Since its debut, ChatGPT has been adopted by companies for a wide range of tasks from summarizing documents to writing computer code, setting off a race amongst Big Tech companies to launch their own offerings based on generative AI.

First Published: Mar 01 2024 | 4:04 PM IST



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