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, a service that uses AI to turn , is now open to all comers. On Wednesday the company behind it, OpenAI, accepted everybody on the Dall-E waiting list.
Already the service was in widespread use, with 1.5 million people making more than 2 million images a day, . Now others who requested access should have it granted, and anyone can .
Artificial intelligence technology today generally refers to systems trained to recognize patterns in immense quantities of real-world data. The approach is revolutionizing computing, producing useful results in recognizing images, screening spam, preventing fraud and controlling self-driving cars.
Dall-E, though, brings some creative flair to the idea. Text prompts like “” can produce entertaining and sometimes intriguing results. It’s a powerful illustration of the growing capability and utility of AI.
Though opening broader access should increase use of Dall-E, people have had alternatives, like and .
Dall-E also could be spreading to other apps and services. OpenAI has begun working on a programming interface that could let businesses incorporate its results, it said Wednesday. That’s already happening elsewhere, for example with a image-editing software.
Tech giants are investing deeply in AI technology. Later this week, where it’s expected to detail its Optimus humanoid robot and FSD technology it hopes will lead to self-driving cars.
Trying to prevent AI image abuse
OpenAI, poker pkv which says its mission is “to ensure that artificial general intelligence benefits all of humanity,” emphasizes controls designed to prevent people from abusing Dall-E’s capabilities. That means or attempts to create images of public figures. OpenAI has a whole .
Not all tools have those kinds of limits. That’s raised hackles in some quarters. US Rep. Anna Eshoo, a Democrat , called for after Stable Diffusion was used “to create photos of violently beaten Asian women and pornography depicting real people,” she said in a Sept. 22 letter.
Stable Diffusion creator Stability AI didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
Another illustration of the difficulty came when a Colorado man from Midjourney. Getty Images, a business that licenses imagery, in September.
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