Fossil announces exit from smartwatch market to focus on core lifestyle biz

Fossil announces exit from smartwatch market to focus on core lifestyle biz


Representative image: Fossil Gen 6 Hybrid

American lifestyle brand Fossil has announced the end of its smartwatch division, according to a news report on The Verge. In an interview with the US-based media outlet, Fossil’s executive Vice President, Jeff Boyer said that the company is redirecting its resources to strengthen the core segments of its business.


“As the smartwatch landscape has evolved significantly over the past few years, we have made the strategic decision to exit the smartwatch business,” said Boyer. “Fossil Group is redirecting resources to support our core strength and the core segments of our business that continue to provide strong growth opportunities for us: designing and distributing exciting traditional watches, jewellery, and leather goods under our own as well as licensed brand names,” he added.


Fossil’s Gen 6 lineup of smartwatches, which were launched in 2021, are the last smartwatches by the company. However, Boyer has confirmed that Fossil will continue providing updates to its Google WearOS based smartwatches for the next few years.


According to the report, some Reddit users have been claiming that Fossil’s retail employees have said that the brand will no longer produce smartwatches. Past reports were claiming that the company is holding back the release of its new watches as it was waiting for a new chipset for its future smartwatch lineup. Reports suggesting Fossil’s exit from the smartwatch market started to emerge after the brand pulled out from the Consumer Electronic Show 2024 held earlier this month, which it has been a part of for the past few years.

First Published: Jan 29 2024 | 11:47 AM IST



Source link

Google Lumiere: Everything about multimodal AI model for videos creation

Google Lumiere: Everything about multimodal AI model for videos creation


Google has unveiled a new multimodal AI model ‘Lumiere’ for video generation. Google said, “Lumiere is a text-to-video diffusion model designed for synthesising videos that portray realistic, diverse and coherent motion.” The company touted that the model facilitates content creation tasks and video editing applications such as image-to-video, video in painting, and stylized video generation.


According to Google, Lumiere model uses a Space-Time u-Net (STUNet) architecture to generate videos. Using this architectural design, the model processes all frames in a video at once instead of generating keyframes and then filling the missing frames using temporal super-resolution (TSR) models, which is a common approach for existing video generators.


Google said Lumiere generates the entire temporal duration of the video at once by deploying both spatial and temporal down- and up-sampling. It essentially means the model first generates a full frame rate video in low resolution and later upscales the generated video using a spatial super-resolution (SSR) model to produce the final result. In the research paper previewing Lumiere, Google said that the sample videos generated by the AI model are 80 frames long at 16 frames-per-second, essentially 5 seconds long. The initially generated video is at 128×128 resolution, which is then upscaled to 1024×1024 using SSR.


According to Google, Lumiere video generation model also lets users apply text-based image editing methods for consistent video editing. For example, its Cinemagraphs feature lets users animate a specific region within the image to generate a video. For stylized video generation, Lumiere can generate videos in the target style using a single reference image provided by the user.

First Published: Jan 29 2024 | 11:28 AM IST



Source link

Elon Musk's X blocks searches for Taylor Swift on its platform; here's why

Elon Musk's X blocks searches for Taylor Swift on its platform; here's why


Taylor Swift (Photo: Bloomberg)

Elon Musk-owned social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter, has blocked searches for Taylor Swift after explicit images of the pop star created using artificial intelligence surfaced on the platform last week.


As verified by Business Standard, X returned “Oops, something went wrong” for “Taylor Swift” and “Taylor Swift AI”. However, searches like “Taylor Swift Photos” and “Taylor Swift singer” still get results. Taylor is yet to publicly comment on the incident.


This comes at a time when social media platforms, as well as governments, are scrambling to tackle the problem of “deepfakes”, realistic images or videos made using AI to show celebrities in compromising or misleading situations.


According to the “2023 State of Deepfakes Report” by “Home Security Heroes”, a US-based web security services company, deepfake videos have increased five-fold since 2019.

In India, deepfakes of actor Rashmika Mandanna went viral on the internet last year, following which a 23-year-old B-Tech graduate from Andhra Pradesh was arrested for making them. Later, a deepfake video of former cricketer Sachin Tendulkar also surfaced where he was promoting a gaming app. An FIR was filed against the app.  

Also Read: Louis Vuitton’s Bernard Arnault overtakes Elon Musk as world’s richest man 


Several other film stars, such as Alia Bhatt, Kajol, Aishwarya Rai and Katrina Kaif, have also been targeted with deepfake videos.


Last year, Prime Minister Narendra Modi also flagged the use of AI for creating deepfakes, saying this can precipitate a big crisis. He urged the media to spread awareness about its misuse and impact.


Earlier this month, Union Minister of State for Electronics and IT Rajeev Chandrasekhar said that the rules for the Digital Personal Data Protection (DPDP) Act will be out by the end of the month. These will curb deepfakes over social media platforms.


The ministry had held meetings with several platforms in December to discuss the issue of rising deepfakes and misinformation. 


On Monday, Chandrasekhar told the Financial Times (FT) in an interview that the social media companies will be “held accountable” for AI-generated deepfakes posted on their platforms


“We are the world’s largest democracy [and] we are obviously deeply concerned about the impact of cross-border actors using disinformation, using misinformation, using deepfakes to cause problems in our democracy,” Chandrasekhar said, adding that the country is framing tech regulations that are “between the US and Europe” in terms of rights of the companies. 

First Published: Jan 29 2024 | 10:52 AM IST



Source link

Baidu, not Google, to power AI on Samsung Galaxy S24 series phones in China

Baidu, not Google, to power AI on Samsung Galaxy S24 series phones in China


The Samsung S24 smartphone. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg


By Yoolim Lee

Samsung Electronics Co. will feature Baidu Inc.’s Ernie Bot as a key attraction of its new Galaxy S24 smartphone series in China.


The South Korean maker has pitched its latest handset family as the first of a wave of AI smartphones, and Baidu’s artificial intelligence tools will help with text summarization, organization and translation, Baidu said in a statement. It will also provide the backend support for Samsung’s “circle to search” feature, which is handled by Alphabet Inc.’s Google in other markets.


Google’s Android software provides the backbone for the majority of smartphones in China, but the company’s add-on mobile services and app store are not available, leaving it to local companies to fill gaps with alternatives like Tencent Holdings Ltd.’s WeChat. For Baidu, the Samsung deal marks a major adopter of its Ernie AI, one of the earliest and best efforts to create a Chinese challenger to OpenAI’s ChatGPT.


Samsung is making a push to expand its small share in China, the world’s largest smartphone market. The company’s foldable devices give it a distinctive position in the premium segment and deeper integration with local services such as Baidu’s may help entice more consumers to switch from Apple Inc.’s iPhone or local brands.

First Published: Jan 29 2024 | 10:10 AM IST



Source link

Elon Musk's X pledges 100-person office in Texas to enforce content rules

Elon Musk's X pledges 100-person office in Texas to enforce content rules



By Kurt Wagner


Elon Musk’s X, the company formerly known as Twitter, is planning to build a new “Trust and Safety center of excellence” in Austin, Texas, to help enforce its content and safety rules. 

 


The company aims to hire 100 full-time content moderators at the new location, according to Joe Benarroch, head of business operations at X. The group will focus on fighting material related to child sexual exploitation, but will help enforce the social media platform’s other rules, which include restrictions on hate speech and violent posts, he added. The company did not specify when this new center will be operational. 


“X does not have a line of business focused on children, but it’s important that we make these investments to keep stopping offenders from using our platform for any distribution or engagement with CSE content,” Benarroch said. People must be at least 13-years-old to open an account on X, and the company says less than 1% of its daily users are between the ages of 13-17. Those 17 and under can’t be targeted by advertisers.  


Musk has been criticized for cutting back on X’s trust and safety operations since taking the helm of the company in October 2022. He has also rescinded some policies, including those around misinformation, in an effort to bring “free speech” back to the service. 


The timing of X’s announcement comes just a few days before Chief Executive Officer Linda Yaccarino is scheduled to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee for a hearing on child safety online. She’ll be joined by the CEOs of other major technology companies, including Meta Platforms Inc., Snap Inc., TikTok, and Discord. 


Yaccarino was in Washington this past week speaking with senators from both sides of the aisle ahead of the upcoming hearing. Conversations focused on X’s efforts with CSE and other types of problematic content, but she also tried to highlight the ways that X is working to distinguish itself from Twitter and the company’s prior policies and leadership, Benarroch added.

First Published: Jan 27 2024 | 10:47 PM IST



Source link

Elon Musk's X pledges 100-person office in Texas to enforce content rules

AI-model developed to detect extremist users, ISIS-related content on X


The team said that their approach focussing on users and user content could be employed on other social media platforms as well | Photo: Bloomberg


Using tweets from 2009-2021, researchers have developed a predictive model that can detect extremist users and content related to the militant group ‘Islamic State’ (ISIS).


Their work could help social media companies identify and eventually restrict such accounts in a timelier manner and abate their impact on online communities, they said.


The researchers from the Pennsylvania State University, US, identified potential propaganda messages and their characteristics and developed an image classifier to find the most frequent categories of images attached to tweets about ISIS.


“The Islamic State group and its affiliates, sympathisers and followers continue to manipulate online communities to spread extremist propaganda,” said Younes Karimi, a graduate student at the university pursuing a doctorate in informatics and the first author of the paper published in the journal Social Media Analysis and Mining.


Apart from the ISIS-linked tweets they used for analysis, the researchers further collected a dataset of tweets from potential ISIS supporters to investigate their recent activities.


According to Karimi, the Islamic State group is increasingly relying on social media to spread propaganda, undermine its rivals and recruit sympathisers, despite countermeasures by websites like X (formerly Twitter) to restrict its online activities.


For the study, the researchers used artificial intelligence (AI) techniques – machine learning and natural language processing – to differentiate the users sharing ISIS-related content. While machine learning makes predictions based on the past data, natural language processing involves manipulating textual data.


ISIS accounts identified before 2015 served as the labelled data for the study’s ISIS users, while for identifying potential ISIS supporters, the researchers built a user classifier using the old dataset.


The users in the dataset included known members of the Islamic State group and those who retweeted, quoted or mentioned ISIS, said Karimi.


“We believe that users who retweet or quote Islamic State group content are more likely to be affiliates or sympathisers, while those who just mention the content are less likely to be supporters. However, tweets posted by mentioners are still very likely related to ISIS and contain topics similar to ISIS tweets, which make mentioners suitable to be considered as our non-ISIS users and non-trivial counterparts to ISIS users,” said Karimi.


The researchers then analysed the tweets to identify what they referred to as “candidate propaganda.” They compared topics used by known Islamic State group accounts prior to 2015 in the old dataset to the content posted after 2015 by potential affiliates and supporters in their recent dataset.

The team found that firstly, the identified content was “pervasive and continuous in the way it’s shared.”

Secondly, the team examined ideology-based words and images, which they said are “often designed to elicit an emotional response and influence a large audience.”

Thirdly, studying content involving hashtags, Karimi said, “Supporters and affiliates of the Islamic State group recruited people to retweet hashtags to create trending ideas, such as strong religious references, and curate group messaging to improve the group’s branding and ensure message longevity.”

The team found that the most used hashtags from ISIS included “The Islamic State”, “Caliphate News”, “Urgent”, “The State of the Caliphate” and “ISIS”.


Karimi said that the longitudinal perspective of the dataset was important because it included data from before and after 2015, when a major crackdown by Twitter removed user accounts and content involving the Islamic State group.


“In response, the extremists had to change their online strategy and move to other platforms, and little is known about their online whereabouts since that crackdown,” said Karimi.


The team said that their approach focussing on users and user content could be employed on other social media platforms as well.

(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: Jan 27 2024 | 6:40 PM IST



Source link

YouTube
Instagram
WhatsApp