Gemini Personalized AI Generation Free to All; Meta Contractors Posed as Teens to Check Competitor Chatbots; Apple May Have to Allow 3rd Party App Payments in Britain, South Korea-Spending A Trillion on Memory Chip Production Boost

Gemini’s personalized Nano Banana-powered personalized image generation feature is now free for all eligible users in the US. TechCrunch.com reports that up to now, Google has only made it available to Plus, Pro, and Ultra subscribers. The Google Gemini Personal Intelligence feature allowing users to create images that reflect their unique interests. This means that images can be generated based on Gemini’s understanding of your likes and preferences without you having to specify them in your prompt. Gemini utilizes data from your Google account connections— such as Gmail, Google Photos, YouTube, and Search—to achieve this. It can also pull actual images from your Google Photos…so you don’t have to manually upload the pics. Google notes that the Gemini AI chatbot exceeded 750 million monthly active users earlier this year. That’s way more than a niche. 

In an interesting bit of something resembling corporate espionage, Meta had hundreds of contractors pose as minors online and probe how competitor chatbots responded to prompts involving suicide, sex, eating disorders, and other high-risk subjects, according to internal documents and five people familiar with the project. According to wired.com, the effort targeted OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google Gemini, and Character dot AI. The contractors were asked to create dummy under-18 accounts, send written prompts and images to rival chatbots, and copy the responses into spreadsheets. Some of the images contractors sent included pills, knives, nooses, and a medical diagram of a gynecological procedure. Out of nearly 4,000 prompts reviewed by Wired, hundreds focused on suicide and self harm, and there were about 240 involving sex or romance. There were a number that involved drugs, profanity and racial slurs. Meta has cast the effort as routine safety testing. Wired had a couple of attorneys look at the spreadsheets, and they opined that at least the work violates the terms of service of the competitors…and at worst could amount to anti-competitive practices. 

The Brits are considering following what the Europeans have done..that is, forcing Apple to allow 3rd party app payments as well as Apple Pay rivals. 9to5mac.com notes that the British antitrust regulator has proposed forcing Apple to allow developers to link to third-party payment options to purchase apps and subscriptions outside of the App Store. The proposal would specifically ban Apple from using the same forms of “malicious compliance” it has tried in both the US and EU. The EU required Apple to permit third-party app stores, while a US court ruled that developers have the right to direct iPhone users to third-party payment platforms for app purchases and subscriptions. Britain’s Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) is now proposing to apply this latter rule in the UK. The CMA also proposes to force Apple to allow third-party rivals to the Apple Wallet app for contactless payments. This would enable competitors to Apple Pay.

The South Korean government and big tech companies are ponying up to the tune of a trillion dollars for several flagship mega-projects that could boost the global memory chip supply…something badly needed what with AI server centers gobbling up a big share of the chip supply. Arstechnica.com reports that the firms include giant Samsung and SK Hynix as well. Hyundai Motor Co is also hustling to build out humanoid robots via its Boston Dynamics subsidiary. South Korean President Le Jae Myung said in a speech “We must secure the core elements of AI faster than any other country.” Between the South Koreans, China, the US, and others…the race is on!

I’m Clark Reid and you’re ‘Technified’ for now.



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