862805
Carlos Santos

@carlos-santos #862805

Brazilian 🇧🇷 photographer blending art with web3. ✨ Working with the magic of light to create images, not just take pictures 📸. Constantly traveling ✈️
53 Follower 330 Following
About the new Rodeo's flipping feature: This brings the thrill of monetizing art with all the benefits of web3 technology.

Why stick with big tech platforms when we can profit from these exciting micro-transactions? Kudos to @rodeodotclub for empowering artists!
I was five, and he was six We rode on horses made of sticks He wore black and I wore white He would always win the fight Bang bang, he shot me down

https://rodeo.club/post/0xA41AADAF2Eb78C8548d470F87A95F782Bf0C1f1d/6
OpenAI has given ChatGPT a phone number (+1-800-242-8478). You can call or whatspp it for answers, also you get 15 minutes of free calls per month, and OpenAI claims your data from calls and messages won’t be used to train their models... Do you believe?
Blessed are you among women - 3
GM ☕️ beautiful people.
Blessed are you among women - 4
Google has relaxed its "Generative AI Prohibited Use" policy to alow customers to use its AI tools in high-risk areas like healthcare or employment, as long as there's human intervention. This change comes amid long-standing regulatory concerns about AI's biased outcomes in decision-making.
While the EU mandates that AI systems in high-stakes areas must be registered, supervised by humans, and pass strict quality and risk tests, the US is also catching up with laws in states like Collorado and New York.

The big question is: can human oversight truly mitigate AI's biases, or are we just finding new ways to make biased decisions seem more acceptable?
YouTube is giving YouTubers the power to choose if their content can be used for AI model training by third parties. So generous, right? Because who wouldn't trust a list of 18 tech giants like Amazon, Meta, and OpenAI to respect their content? Sure, you can control it, but only if you remember to turn it on. While they ban unauthorized scraping, it's apparently okay for them to use your content for their own AI training. They can still train their models like Veo 2 with your videos, thanks to 'existing agreements.' Isn’t it heartwarming to see tech giants ensuring they stay ahead while rivals are left scrambling?
Meta has written to California Attorney General Rob Bonta, urging him to block OpenAI’s shift from non-profit to for-profit. Interesting how big-tech only steps in when they see a threat to their own game. Elon Musk, as usual, is stirring the pot. Meta warns about exploiting non-profit assets for private gain, but let’s not forget the track record of these tech giants. While OpenAI argues they're advancing their mission for humanity, it's hard not to question if anyone in this equation really cares about anything beyond profit margins.
Go outside and touch the grass (even if it's not green)