AI has moved from a niche buzzword to an everyday companion ā powering search engines, writing tools, browsers, phones, and even cars. Whether you realise it or not, almost everyone now interacts with AI in some form. The race to build and refine Large Language Models (LLMs) has become the next big tech arms race.
All the major tech players are deeply invested in AI.
- OpenAIās ChatGPT,Ā Googleās Gemini,Ā Anthropicās Claude,Ā Meta AI, andĀ xAIās GrokĀ (by Elon Musk) dominate the landscape.
- Microsoft Copilot,Ā Apple, andĀ PerplexityĀ integrate OpenAIās technology directly into their products.
While this topic deserves a series of its own, here are a few key AI developments that recently made headlines.
𤯠AI Hallucinations ā When Confidence Lies
AI hallucinations are when AI gives confident but wrong answers ā essentially, fabrications that sound right.
Why does this happen?
- Pattern prediction, not knowledge:Ā LLMs donāt āknowā facts ā they predict likely word patterns.
- Training data gaps:Ā If the model hasnāt seen updated info, it improvises.
- Prompt ambiguity:Ā If your question is vague, the AI fills in the blanks to sound coherent.
Real-world impact:
Recently, Deloitte was caught using AI to draft reports for the Australian government that included fabricated references and false footnotes ā leading to a repayment of AUD $98,000 or more.
So next time you ask AI for investment advice or medical guidance, take it with a grain of salt.
š„ Hyperrealistic AI Videos ā Sora 2 Is Here
Remember seeing Queen Elizabeth and Albert Einstein wrestling, or Sam Altman āstealing GPUsā from Target? Theyāre fake ā but now, thanks to OpenAIās Sora 2, they look frighteningly real.
But this realism comes with heavy ethical and emotional weight.
Recently, Zelda Williams, daughter of the late Robin Williams, condemned the use of AI to recreate her fatherās likeness.
The fallout:
- TheĀ California governmentĀ has already passed laws restricting the use of AI-generated actors in films.
- OpenAIĀ faces potentialĀ copyright legal battlesĀ over generated content.
š Final thought
How much of what weāll see, read, or believe in the next decade will actually be real ā and will that even matter anymore?