While the whole world is still divided on AI, Google's new feature for Bard will now let websites and their owners or managers have the power to allow or prevent its generative AI access to its data.
Google is giving web publishers a new way to control AI training data and “whether their sites help improve Bard and Vertex AI generative APIs.” Large language models (LLMs) are trained on massive ...
Google announced a way for publishers to opt-out of having data from their website used to train the company’s artificial intelligence (AI) models, but keep information accessible to those querying on ...
Contractors play a crucial role in training Google's Bard AI chatbot. The quality and accuracy of AI products could be compromised due to the high-pressure work environment contractors are subjected ...
Now the Google-Extended flag in robots.txt can tell Google’s crawlers to include a site in search without using it to train new AI models like the ones powering Bard. Now the Google-Extended flag in ...
You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email. Follow Lakshmi Varanasi Every time Lakshmi publishes a story, you’ll get an alert straight to your ...
Google is being sued for utilizing copyrighted material and personal information as training fodder for its AI endeavors, including the company’s ChatGPT rival Bard. The proposed class-action ...
Web publishers now have a choice whether to allow their web content to be utilized by Google as material to feed its Google Bard and any future AI models it decides to make. This choice can be ...
Large language models are trained on all kinds of data, most of which it seems was collected without anyone’s knowledge or consent. Now you have a choice whether to allow your web content to be used ...