The Guy Who Paid $270 Million For Two Pizzas

The Guy Who Paid $270 Million For Two Pizzas

This year on May 22, Bitcoin and cryptocurrency enthusiasts will come together to celebrate Bitcoin Pizza Day. The date is a significant one for the...
This year on May 22, Bitcoin and cryptocurrency enthusiasts will come together to celebrate Bitcoin Pizza Day. The date is a significant one for the crypto world. Why? Because 13 years ago a bloke used Bitcoin to buy Papa John’s pizza, marking the first time in history that crypto was used in the real world for a purchase. Storytime, friends. Laszlo Hanyecz & Bitcoin Pizza Day, Explained Let’s dial it back a little. On May 18, 2010, Bitcoin miner and software programmer Laszlo Hanyecz wanted to buy himself some tasty pizza. Mans wanted his fix bad, so he went on...
Creating Viral AI Ads: A Step-by-Step Guide

Creating Viral AI Ads: A Step-by-Step Guide

Last week, a creator named ‘demonflyingfox’ uploaded a YouTube video of Harry Potter by Balenciaga. The entire video was generated with AI, and was so...
Last week, a creator named ‘demonflyingfox’ uploaded a YouTube video of Harry Potter by Balenciaga. The entire video was generated with AI, and was so convincing that some social media users thought it was an actual ad from Balenciaga itself. If you were wondering how complex it is to create such a sophisticated video, wonder no further: you can actually create similar ‘AI ads’ yourself. It’s not a short process, but it’s not too complicated. A YouTube account named PromptJungle graciously shared a step-by-step tutorial on how to create your own luxury brand campaign. Here’s how to do it. How...
Prompts & Does It Work?

Prompts & Does It Work?

How to jailbreak ChatGPT: There is a new way to jailbreak ChatGPT or Bing Chat, the world’s most popular Large Language Model (LLM). What is...
How to jailbreak ChatGPT: There is a new way to jailbreak ChatGPT or Bing Chat, the world’s most popular Large Language Model (LLM). What is “jailbreaking” in AI?  “Jailbreaking” typically refers to the process of getting around restrictions imposed by the makers of the AI. It then allows the AI to perform actions that are not normally allowed by the AI makers. In some cases, this can violate the terms of service, but it isn’t illegal (yet).  We tried the latest ChatGPT jailbreak We tried it out and it works (for now!). So how does it happen?  Here is the...
Artificial Intelligence is capable of breaking 99% of invisible watermarks in artwork

Artificial Intelligence is capable of breaking 99% of invisible watermarks in artwork

Invisible watermarks that protect an artist’s work are removable using generative AI models, according to a study by researchers from the Universities of California, Santa...
Invisible watermarks that protect an artist’s work are removable using generative AI models, according to a study by researchers from the Universities of California, Santa Barbara and Carnegie Mellon. The study launched what’s known as a series of “regeneration attacks” powered by AI to test the strength of invisible watermarks in several artworks. Such attacks refer to various methods that aim to “degrade or remove invisible watermarks in images”. In the study, they included: Brightness or contrast adjustment: Changing the parameters of an image’s brightness or contrast to make the watermark harder to detect; JPEG compression: Compressing an image to...
How to Use LimeWire’s New AI Art Generator

How to Use LimeWire’s New AI Art Generator

Remember LimeWire? Before Spotify, Apple Music, or Tidal, the platform was how kids my generation shared music, film, and television content with each other. LimeWire...
Remember LimeWire? Before Spotify, Apple Music, or Tidal, the platform was how kids my generation shared music, film, and television content with each other. LimeWire was just one of several “file-sharing” sites like Napster and *cough* PirateBay, and record label executives detested those platforms. They absolutely disliked how ‘Ne_Yo_So_Sick.mp3’ was able to be so seamlessly transferred from one user to another without them raking in the royalties.  Alas, after a flurry of copyright lawsuits, as well as the emergence of mainstream music-streaming sites that we know of today, LimeWire caved. In 2011, the company agreed to pay a mammoth US$105...