Computerspeak by Alexandru Voica

Computerspeak by Alexandru Voica

Share this post

Computerspeak by Alexandru Voica
Computerspeak by Alexandru Voica
At TED AI in Vienna, Europe fights for its place at the table; filmmakers are worried about AI; AI agents are getting more capable; Meta criticized for calling models "open source"
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More

At TED AI in Vienna, Europe fights for its place at the table; filmmakers are worried about AI; AI agents are getting more capable; Meta criticized for calling models "open source"

Can AI help Africa close the development gap? Anthropic CEO publishes lengthy essay on AI's future; US tech companies investing in UK data centers; OpenAI researches stereotyping

Alexandru Voica's avatar
Alexandru Voica
Oct 18, 2024
∙ Paid

Share this post

Computerspeak by Alexandru Voica
Computerspeak by Alexandru Voica
At TED AI in Vienna, Europe fights for its place at the table; filmmakers are worried about AI; AI agents are getting more capable; Meta criticized for calling models "open source"
Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More
1
Share

I’m spending the week at TED AI Vienna, the first AI-focused TED conference held in Europe. As I listen to people debate issues related to innovation and regulation, I can’t help but think of a clip that went viral on X where French president Macron finally said the quiet part out loud: Europe has spent the last decade over-regulating and under-investing, which has put the region on a path of technological irrelevance.

But, despite these missteps, I believe there is still a path forward for Europe—one that draws on its long-standing industrial strengths. The real opportunity for Europe to lead in AI doesn’t lie in trying to outdo Silicon Valley in consumer software or Beijing in massive data projects. Instead, Europe should double down on what has always made it formidable: its ability to deliver efficient and practical engineering solutions for precision-driven industries.

Automotive, energy or healthcare, built on decades of precision and quality, represent the perfect platforms for AI innovation. Sepp Hochreiter, inventor of the LSTM and founder of AI startup NXAI, illustrated this point very clearly in a conversation at TED AI with Liquid AI CEO Ramin Hasani. While admitting that Europe lacks the AI infrastructure to turn academic research into products that generate revenue, Mr Hochreiter showed what’s possible today in terms of industrial innovation: his company is achieving speedup of 10,000x for simulations of particles in industrial systems such as chemical processes in steelmaking or fluid dynamics for automotive design that would not be possible with traditional computation. More importantly, these simulations can also be scaled up to replicate the entire properties of a real-world system, as opposed to smaller or isolated segments of a whole. Mr Hochreiter also had an interesting observation: European AI companies should not build mechanical servants that just do what they’re told (e.g. chatbots or agents of the ChatGPT variety), but specialize in developing machines that are able to extend human intelligence and help us analyze and identify patterns that are limited by our processing abilities, from the physical (computer vision-enabled robots) to the cognitive (generative AI systems with a world model).

By the end of the week, it became clear to me that we need a major mindset shift. The EU’s regulatory-first approach has clearly now become its Achilles’ heel, producing a cottage industry of well-meaning people dressed in businesswear that have spent the last few years seeking philosophical answers to AI regulation, while the rest of the world has moved at speed to develop and deploy this new technology.

The EU AI Act and GDPR, though well-intentioned, have created bureaucratic friction for EU Inc., forcing European companies to divest resources away from innovation and focus too much on compliance, therefore opening the space for North American and Chinese companies that thrive on agility and iteration to dominate the European tech landscape.

We urgently need to wake up and start building the future, not just imagine it.

And now, here are this week’s news:

❤️Computer loves

Our top news picks for the week - your essential reading from the world of AI

  • TechCrunch: From Elon Musk to cop car chases, how a software engineer launched a police AI startup

  • Wired: Filmmakers Are Worried About AI. Big Tech Wants Them to See ‘What's Possible’

  • WSJ: AI Agents Can Do More Than Answer Queries. That Raises a Few Questions.

  • The Guardian: ‘I’m empowering my song to go and make love with different people’: Imogen Heap on how her AI twin will rewrite pop

  • FT: Can AI help Africa close the development gap?

  • FT: Meta criticised for calling its AI models ‘open-source’

  • TIME: AI Leaders Discuss Responsibility, Regulation, and Text as a ‘Relic of the Past’

  • Sifted: ChatGPT for trillion-dollar industries - meet the startups using AI to engineer better hardware

  • WSJ: U.S. Tech Firms to Invest More Than $8 Billion in U.K. Data Centers Amid AI Frenzy

  • Anthropic: Machines of Loving Grace - How AI Could Transform the World for the Better

  • Axios: AWS CEO explains Amazon’s “any model you want” strategy

  • TechCrunch: The promise and perils of synthetic data

  • 404 Media: ‘AI-Mazing Tech-Venture’: National Archives Pushes Google Gemini AI on Employees

  • FT: Head of Saudi tech institute pledges to limit China AI collaboration

  • MIT Technology Review: OpenAI says ChatGPT treats us all the same (most of the time)

⚙️Computer does

AI in the wild: how artificial intelligence is used across industry, from the internet, social media, and retail to transportation, healthcare, banking, and more

  • The Verge: Modders are using AI to create chatty companions in Skyrim and Stardew

  • TechCrunch: Treehouse uses AI to help electricians install tech like EV chargers and heat pumps more cheaply

  • BBC: Museum visitors to have AI chats with dodo

  • Fortune: ‘Why the e.l.f. not?’ The beauty brand built an AI model to write social media comments

🧑‍🎓Computer learns

Interesting trends and developments from various AI fields, companies and people

  • TechCrunch: Experts say OpenAI’s patent pledge amounts to little more than ‘virtue signaling’

  • Meta: Partnering with Blumhouse, creators, and the entertainment industry as we develop Meta Movie Gen

  • Fortune: Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff blasts rival Microsoft’s ‘disappointing’ Copilot: ‘It just doesn’t work’

  • VentureBeat:Small but mighty: H2O.ai's new AI models challenge tech giants in document analysis

  • VentureBeat:Google launches NotebookLM Business to make enterprise AI audio, text

  • VentureBeat:Archetype AI’s Newton model learns physics from raw data—without any help from humans

  • WSJ: OpenAI, Bain Expand AI Partnership to Sell ChatGPT to Businesses

  • VentureBeat: Shadow IT risks are on the rise as GenAI tools gain popularity with employees

  • Reuters: Google shifts Gemini app team to DeepMind

  • Fortune: OpenAI is quietly pitching its products to the U.S. military and national security establishment

  • MIT Technology Review: AI could help people find common ground during deliberations

  • The Verge: YouTube takes a baby step toward labeling authentic video

  • The Verge: Adobe teases AI tools that build 3D scenes, animate text, and make distractions disappear

  • TechCrunch: Former Palantir CISO Dane Stuckey joins OpenAI to lead security

  • TechCrunch: Meta’s AI chief says world models are key to ‘human-level AI’ — but it might be 10 years out

  • VentureBeat: Nvidia just dropped a new AI model that crushes OpenAI’s GPT-4—no big launch, just big results

  • VentureBeat: Pika 1.5 updates again to add even more AI video Pikaffects: crumble, dissolve, deflate, ta-da

  • VentureBeat: Mistral AI’s new language models bring AI power to your phone and laptop

  • Fortune: Vista’s Robert Smith says enterprise software firms will be among the last to profit from AI—but that gains will be huge

  • Fortune: Top AI leaders say they don’t want women to get left behind in the tech revolution

  • Fortune: Walmart’s CTO places bigger bets on generative AI as customer shopping habits evolve

  • Fortune: Employees want to know where they fit in as AI transforms workplace routines

  • Fortune: ‘Godmother of AI’ wants everyone to have a place in the tech transformation

  • Business Insider: Elon Musk's xAI is on a hiring spree for 'AI tutors'

  • Business Insider: Robots and AI-powered assistive tech are poised to transform accessibility and mobility

  • Business Insider: Your old images stored on Photobucket could soon be used to train AI

  • Business Insider: Security threats to AI models are giving rise to a new crop of startups

  • Business Insider: Tech execs from Salesforce and Qualcomm share their best practices for implementing AI in the workplace

  • MIT Technology Review: A data bottleneck is holding AI science back, says new Nobel winner

  • Reuters: AI enhances flood warnings but cannot erase risk of disaster

  • The Verge: YouTube is testing “AI-enhanced” suggestions for comment replies

  • TechCrunch: Adobe’s Project Super Sonic uses AI to generate sound effects for your videos

  • Wired: Real-Time Video Deepfake Scams Are Here. This Tool Attempts to Zap Them

  • WSJ: Amazon, Databricks Strike Five-Year Deal Around AI Chips

  • VentureBeat: PicsArt’s creative AI playbook: A vision for contextual intelligence, AI agents

  • VentureBeat: DataStax looks to help enterprises stuck in AI ‘development hell’, with a little help from Nvidia

  • Fortune: OpenAI’s lead over other AI companies has largely vanished, ‘State of AI’ report finds

  • Fortune: Inside Wendy’s drive-thru AI that makes ordering fast food even faster

  • Fortune: AI chatbots need some healthy disagreement to work best together, tech exec says

  • Business Insider: The latest AI trend is asking ChatGPT to tell you something about yourself that you might not know

  • Business Insider: Google Shopping just got an AI makeover

  • TechCrunch: Director Morgan Neville is steering clear of generative AI after ‘Roadrunner’ backlash

  • TechCrunch: ‘Where we are today in biology AI is similar to GPT in 2020’: An interview with the CEO of Africa’s biggest AI startup

  • TechCrunch: After selling his last AI startup to Meta, Beyond Presence’s founder nabs $3.1M to build lifelike avatars

  • Researchers question AI’s ‘reasoning’ ability as models stumble on math problems with trivial changes

  • Here’s the full list of 39 US AI startups that have raised $100M or more in 2024

  • WSJ: This AI Pioneer Thinks AI Is Dumber Than a Cat

  • Bloomberg: Microsoft Artificial Intelligence VP Bubeck to Join OpenAI

  • The Verge: Adobe’s AI video model is here, and it’s already inside Premiere Pro

  • The Verge: Photoshop is getting a bunch of new AI tools

  • Reuters: Google to buy power for AI needs from small modular nuclear reactor company Kairos

  • FT: The difficult work conversation AI helped me with

  • Business Insider: 'Let chaos reign': AI inference costs are about to plummet

  • Business Insider: Jensen Huang hails Elon Musk and xAI for building an AI supercomputer at 'superhuman' speed

  • Business Insider: Jensen Huang says he wants Nvidia to be a company with 100 million AI assistants

  • Business Insider: How AI is changing business at telecom giants, according to Nvidia and Verizon execs

  • Fortune: Your corporate board might be the weakest link when it comes to adopting AI

  • Fortune: 5 steps firms should take to see ROI from AI, according to Accenture

  • VentureBeat: OpenAI unveils experimental ‘Swarm’ framework, igniting debate on AI-driven automation

  • VentureBeat: AI21 CEO says transformers not right for AI agents due to error perpetuation

  • VentureBeat: DeepMind’s Michelangelo benchmark reveals limitations of long-context LLMs

Keep reading with a 7-day free trial

Subscribe to Computerspeak by Alexandru Voica to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.

Already a paid subscriber? Sign in
© 2025 Alexandru Voica
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start writingGet the app
Substack is the home for great culture

Share

Copy link
Facebook
Email
Notes
More