Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Five Top Tech Takeaways: Twitter $20 Billion Brand Bonfire, No Bard for Canada, Apple's GPT and AI Regulations

 

Bonfire of Billions

Musk's Twitter Rebrand: Lighting Up $20 Billion in Brand Value?

Elon Musk's recent decision to rebrand Twitter as "X" and eliminate the iconic bird logo has sparked controversy and is estimated to have wiped out between $4 billion and $20 billion in brand value. The move, which includes a shift in focus towards audio, video, messaging, payments, and banking, has been criticized by analysts and brand agencies who argue that Twitter's brand recognition and cultural influence are invaluable assets. The rebranding has also led to a significant drop in advertising revenue, with advertisers wary of Musk's controversial persona. Despite the backlash, some believe that Musk's personal brand may be powerful enough to carry the new "X" platform forward. (Source: BNN)

Google's Bard Expansion: Canada Left Out in the Cold

Google's AI-powered chatbot, Bard, has expanded globally but has notably excluded Canada, along with countries like China, Russia, Iran, North Korea, Afghanistan, Belarus, and Cuba. This move comes amidst Google's ongoing dispute with the Canadian government over the Online News Act, which mandates tech giants like Google and Meta to negotiate compensation deals with media outlets. The Act aims to balance online advertising revenues, a sector dominated by Google and Meta. In response to the Act, both companies have threatened to block news links from their platforms in Canada. Google's Bard, now available in over 40 languages and more than 230 countries, has not clarified if its exclusion of Canada is directly related to these regulatory disputes. (Source: CTV)

Sam Altman's Eyeball Scans: A New Frontier in Crypto or Privacy Breach?

Worldcoin, a project by OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, has launched a global initiative offering free cryptocurrency in exchange for an eyeball scan to create a digital ID. The project aims to establish a new "identity and financial network" and to verify users as human, not bots. Despite privacy concerns, people in countries like Britain, Japan, and India have participated, with Worldcoin claiming to have issued IDs to over two million people in 120 countries. Critics have raised concerns about potential privacy breaches, but Worldcoin insists that the project is "completely private" and that biometric data is either deleted or stored encrypted. The promise of free cryptocurrency has attracted many participants, despite the potential risks. (Source: CTV)

Apple's AI Ambitions: The Birth of 'Apple GPT'

Apple is reportedly developing its own AI-powered chatbot, internally referred to as "Apple GPT", using a large language model (LLM) framework named "Ajax". The project, which runs on Google Cloud and is built with Google JAX, is still in its early stages with no confirmed plans for public release. Multiple teams within Apple are working on the project, including addressing potential privacy issues. Despite Apple's relative silence in the generative AI space, the company has been integrating AI into its software for years, most notably with Siri. Apple's AI initiative is led by John Giannandrea and Craig Federighi, and a significant AI-related announcement is expected from the company next year. (Source: TheVerge)

AI Giants Commit to New Safety Measures Amid White House Initiative

In an effort to manage the risks associated with artificial intelligence (AI), the Biden administration has reached an agreement with seven major AI companies, including Amazon, Google, Meta Platforms, Microsoft, and OpenAI. The companies have voluntarily committed to implementing more safeguards around AI, such as developing a watermarking system to help users identify AI-generated content, testing their AI systems' security and capabilities before public release, investing in research on the technology's societal risks, and facilitating external audits of system vulnerabilities. While these commitments largely reflect existing safety practices, they lack enforcement mechanisms. The White House is also developing an executive order to govern the use of AI, emphasizing that these commitments are not a substitute for federal action or legislation. (Source: WSJ)

Author: Malik Datardina, CPA, CA, CISA. Malik works at Auvenir as a GRC Strategist that is working to transform the engagement experience for accounting firms and their clients. The opinions expressed here do not necessarily represent UWCISA, UW, Auvenir (or its affiliates), CPA Canada or anyone else. This post was written with the assistance of an AI language model. The model provided suggestions and completions to help me write, but the final content and opinions are my own.

Thursday, July 20, 2023

Top Five Tech Takeaways: Llama2 joins the GenAI Fray, XRP Mixed Judgment, Co-pilot Pricing Announced, Tech Reacts to Bill C-18, and Code Interpreter Debuts

Robo Llama Joins the GenAI Battle

Llama2 Joins the GenAI Battle: Meta Offers it Free for Research and Commercial Use

Meta has recently announced the launch of Llama 2, the highly anticipated second generation of their open source large language model. Llama 2 has been released for both research and commercial purposes, free of charge, to promote innovation and development in the field. Microsoft, a longstanding partner of Meta, is deepening its involvement in this project and has become the preferred partner for Llama 2, making it available through Azure. The widespread endorsement from a variety of stakeholders across the technological landscape, academia, and policy, signifies the embracement of Meta's open innovation approach in AI. The model is free for both academic and commercial use - as long you have less than 700 million users. (Source: Meta, The AI Advantage)

Microsoft Unveils AI Copilot: A Pricier Path to Productivity?

Microsoft has unveiled its plans to integrate an AI engine, dubbed Microsoft 365 Copilot, across its productivity suite, with a proposed cost of $30 per user per month. Copilot, comparable to ChatGPT, can execute tasks across various Office applications, from editing Word documents and summarizing Excel data trends, to creating PowerPoint presentations and drafting emails in Outlook. Copilot is set to roll out for 365 E3, E5, Business Standard, and Business Premium customers, though an exact launch date has not been disclosed. Microsoft also plans to include a privacy-centric version of its Bing chatbot that will not store chat history, as an added measure to protect corporate data. (Source: Yahoo)


Bill C-18 Fallout: Tech Giants Google and Meta Block News in Canada

In a strong rebuke to Canada's Bill C-18, which mandates payments from tech giants for news links to support the Canadian news sector, Google and Meta have responded by blocking news links in Canada. Initially, Google had voiced concerns about the approach's uncapped liability and the risky business framework it presented, while Meta had regarded news contribution as highly substitutable. However, the companies' decisions to cut off news links could lead to dramatic consequences: a potential decline in news outlets due to reduced traffic and revenue, decreased reliability of Google's search services, increased reliance on foreign news sources, and a surge in misinformation. (Source: Michael Geist)

Ripple vs SEC: A Mixed Verdict over XRP Sales

In the lawsuit between Ripple and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the verdict delivered was a mixed bag. The court ruled that Ripple's sales of its cryptocurrency, XRP, on public exchanges did not constitute offers of securities, hence rejecting part of the SEC's claim. However, the SEC scored a partial victory as the court found Ripple's $728.9 million sales of XRP to institutional investors were unregistered securities sales. Additionally, it was determined that Ripple's executives couldn't argue a lack of "fair notice" that XRP was a security at the trial. (Source: Reuters)

OpenAI's Code Interpreter: Your New Companion for Data Analysis, Visualizations, and More

OpenAI has recently added a new plug-in to ChatGPT Plus called the Code Interpreter, turning the AI into a personal data analyst. This plug-in utilizes Python to generate responses and allows users to both upload and download files. Here is Business Insider's summary of the key capabilities:

  1. Data Analysis: Users can provide large datasets to the chatbot and request detailed analyses to identify trends, making it capable of handling data in various formats including CSV, XSLT, and JSON.
  2. Data Visualizations: Code Interpreter can generate graphs based on provided datasets, useful for data exploration and visualizations.
  3. Data Cleanup: Instead of manually processing data, Code Interpreter can clean up datasets in seconds, making it a valuable tool for data hygiene.
  4. Game Generation: Users can instruct Code Interpreter to create games from scratch, offering a unique application in recreational coding.
  5. Video and GIF Creation: The plug-in can also generate animated clips and GIFs from images and vice versa, providing users with more creative content creation options.
  6. File Conversion: Code Interpreter can efficiently handle file conversions, such as transforming a PNG file into a JPEG, or an MP4 file into a GIF.
  7. Code Writing and Debugging: Despite its focus on non-coders, Code Interpreter can write and debug code, demonstrating its ability to produce and improve coding output.
  8. Playlist Analysis: The plug-in can be used to analyze Spotify playlists, offering new ways to interpret personal music trends.
  9. QR Code Generation: Code Interpreter can also generate QR codes, simplifying this process for users and providing quick access to web links. 
Here is Andrew Stapleton's take on the OpenAI's latest:


Author: Malik Datardina, CPA, CA, CISA. Malik works at Auvenir as a GRC Strategist that is working to transform the engagement experience for accounting firms and their clients. The opinions expressed here do not necessarily represent UWCISA, UW, Auvenir (or its affiliates), CPA Canada or anyone else. This post was written with the assistance of an AI language model. The model provided suggestions and completions to help me write, but the final content and opinions are my own.

Thursday, July 13, 2023

Beyond the Writer's Strike: Will AI Lead to a Renaissance of Artist Driven Content?


In our previous post, we looked at how AI has the potential to upend the way Hollywood works. With generative AI, the writers are rightfully scared about how the technology can potentially curtail their value in film production. With generative AI, I could generate a story in 35 minutes. It needed much work. However, the AI that I used was not trained on scripts. Neither was I. Imagine we both were. What stories could we generate then? 

Though AI is taking center stage in the kerfuffle, the friction has also exposed a hidden tension underlying the mass movie industry. It is the tenuous relationship between artistic expression and the commercial nature of the television and film industry. The studios that drive Hollywood only cares about recurring profits. They could not care less about art. They’ve always wanted a formula. Prompt script here. Press play on the production process. Put money in the bank and watch stock prices go to the moon. Everything else is irrelevant. Generative AI will give the studios what they want. But it will be a hollow victory. Why? Generative AI will eventually upend the Hollywood Hit Machine  as well. But before we get there, we need to discuss how Optimus Prime got into our heads.

Tapping into Pester Power: Transformers and the Deregulatory Reagan Era
Working on some side projects, I had the fortune of coming across Drawn to Television: American animated sf series of the 1980s by Lincoln Geraghty. The article explores the cartoon era of the 1980s, dominated by cartoons like Transformers, GI Joe, My Little Pony, Thundercats, and more. Geraghty ties the genesis of this genre to Star Wars. Toy companies aimed to replicate the triumph of Kenner's Star Wars action figures by creating a market through TV shows. These shows served as prolonged advertisements for an assortment of toys.

But why did this development wait until the 1980s? The Reagan Administration deregulated television and allowed toy companies to sell directly to kids of all ages and sizes. Before that, the FCC prevented such commercial interests from tapping into children's pester power.

What does this have to do with art and Hollywood?

Film critics did not think much of Transformers and the like. They saw it as “…little more than poorly drawn, glorified half-hour commercials for action figures and video games.” David Wise, a critical writer in the original Transformer series, gives us a better idea of how commercial it was. He explains that the "Rebirth" episodes were initially slated as a five-part mini-series. They were designed to introduce 92 new characters to sell as toys. He was then asked to condense the five-part story into just three episodes. Wise calculated that a new character must be introduced every 12.5 seconds. To make the storyline workable, Wise introduced groups of characters simultaneously, revealing their names and moving on – illustrating that Wise had to sacrifice the story for sales.

The Death of Optimus Prime: Killing off the Old Product Line for the New
Perhaps, the fundamental contradiction between art and commerce can be seen in the toy company’s decision to kill off Optimus Prime in the full-length movie, Transformers: The Movie, released in theatres in 1986. Wise revealed that Hasbro was disappointed with the sales of the toy-truck-robot figurine. The decision was summarized as follows:

“It was a toy show. We just thought we were killing off the old product line to replace it with new products.”

According to this cold hard logic, Optimus Prime seems to be the ultimate unscrupulous used car salesman. However, instead of peddling to adults, he sells to kids. Through his on-screen sacrifice, they could sell Rodimus Prime in his stead.


What is the reaction from young fans? According to the same consultant, Flint Dillie, who came clean about why Prime was killed off, explains how traumatic this was for children who loved the series. Kids were crying in the theatres. Families were so upset that they left during the movie. They even took to their pens, pencils, and typewriters to register their protest with the company. Hasbro gladly gave in. They had us exactly where they wanted us. This turn of events would give sagging Optimus Prime sales the needed boost.

There can't be the best way to entertain children. Specifically, it’s hard to convince a child, parent, or anyone that such an extractive relationship is healthy. How does a parent calm down a despondent child who just saw their hero killed off? It’s probably not to offer them the latest “Prime” that Hasbro has to offer. The larger point, however, is that commercially-driven content clashes not just with artistic expression but how a transaction approach to content is non-optimal for us as a whole.  

The Hollywood Hit Machine: Losing its Luster in the Age of Authenticity
The writer's strike has a limited impact on the content I usually consume, published by YouTubers, podcasts, and other enthusiasts. This shift in popular preference speaks for itself. People prefer to hear stories from real, relatable people instead of the formulaic commercial narratives churned out by the Hollywood Hit Machine.

A good proxy of the shift is the decline in cable television.

As reported by Adweek for June 2023, during prime time, FOX garners the largest average viewership with 1.49 million viewers, followed by MSNBC with 1.32 million, and CNN with 635,000 viewers. These networks collectively attract approximately 3.46 million viewers, representing about 1% of the United States estimated population of 330 million.

Another piece of evidence is the sudden and swift demise of Quibi.

Despite the company raising $2 billion, retaining the A-list of Hollywood talent, and being led by the former Disney executive Jeffrey Katzenberg, the company had shut its doors after six months. The business model was to offer short-form content in the 10 to 15-minute range – short enough to be consumed on a train ride to work. Was the pandemic, as the company claimed, the reason for its demise?

The pandemic proved to be a boom to Netflix and other streaming companies, so that's not the likely cause. Instead, what likely caused the company to crash and burn was that user-generated content was a much better source for short-form content.

Generative AI: The Great User Generative Content Amplifier?
Now we finally get to AI!

As I argue in this Medium post, generative AI is about amplification, not abdication. The post speaks to the issue of abdication from a professional perspective. A lawyer, consultant or CPA can't rely on public-facing generative AI models to do their work. Instead, it can amplify their effort by putting polish on the rough notes they have gathered.

Similarly, it’s abdication to get generative AI to produce a fictional novel in 35 minutes, hoping it will receive rave reviews. According to the Wall Street Journal, a surge in AI-generated story submissions, influenced by online videos promoting ChatGPT, led to the temporary closure of online submissions at Clarkesworld, a science-fiction magazine. Publishers, including Clarkesworld's Neil Clarke, expressed their tendency to reject these AI-written submissions, characterized by grammatically perfect but incoherent and formulaic narratives.

Using generative AI to create these types of submissions signifies an instance of “author abdication." It's the generative AI version of spam. And like we have spam filters and other "internal controls" (like the infamous proof of work concept invented to fight spam), Clarkesworld and others will need to develop similar controls to separate the good from the bad.

Instead, budding authors must work hard to conceive storylines that resonate. It could take weeks and months to sort out plot lines and characters. And you will still need to know Da Vinci Resolve, Premiere Pro, or another video editing tool.

In terms of the maturity of the tools, they have yet to arrive. However, we can see that day is quickly coming. Consider the following that is already out there.

AI Image Generation is Amazing: The current ability to generate images from a few sentences is simply the stuff of science fiction. Using stability.ai, I used this prompt “Snowy winter wonderland with a lone cabin in the distance, surrounded by frosty trees and fresh snowfall, peaceful, serene, detailed, winter landscape” to generate the following image:



AI Image Generators Enable Panning and Zoom: As explained in this video, Midjourney can generate AI images and now can allow the panning of an image. It also allows a zoom-out feature.

Professional Narrators for the Price of a Latte: In Kevin's heroic struggle, I got a professional-sounding voice to narrate the story. The cost? Eleven Labs sells this for the bargain price of $5 a month. The next tier is only $20/month.

Text to Video is Already Here: Matt Wolfe, who follows the generative AI space, compiled this video that looks at the current state of what’s out there with text to video. Lot’s to be desired. However, we’re only nine months into the Generative AI boom. The footage includes Runway ML, featured on Vox’s Recode podcast. The interview discusses how AI eliminates the need for manual labour for rotoscoping. The technique was used in the movie Everywhere All at Once, saving the production team "several hours."

The first nonsuccessful film not produced by Hollywood is still years away. However, with the rapid pace at which these tools will improve, it takes little imagination to see that the cheque is in the mail.

Reel to Real: Is There Life Beyond Hollywood?
We do not have to go far to see the types of stories that people will produce that are not driven entirely by commercial interests. Consider the historical drama DiriliÅŸ: ErtuÄŸrul. The series chronicles the rise of ErtuÄŸrul, whose son, Osman I, would establish the Ottoman State in present-day Turkey. And there are documentaries like Ava DuVernay's The 13th. The Netflix documentary explores the mass incarceration of African Americans in the US. The popularity of the ErtuÄŸrul illustrates that there is no need to make up heroes when they already exist. At the same time, the success of the 13th proves that people are interested in reality – not just fiction.

To be sure, we can expect Hollywood to continue for the foreseeable future. Cable television still attracts millions, albeit with a much-reduced viewership from its glory days. However, the shift in audience preference towards content from relatable individuals, coupled with the rise of sophisticated AI tools, indicates that the dawn of a new era in filmmaking is at hand. It's potentially a future where anyone can tell a story, where unique voices are heard, and commercial interests don't kill off characters that kids love. This technological revolution might enable a broadening of storytelling, creating space for a multiplicity of voices and narratives beyond the confines of Hollywood.

Author: Malik Datardina, CPA, CA, CISA. Malik works at Auvenir as a GRC Strategist that is working to transform the engagement experience for accounting firms and their clients. The opinions expressed here do not necessarily represent UWCISA, UW, Auvenir (or its affiliates), CPA Canada or anyone else. This post was written with the assistance of an AI language model. The model provided suggestions and completions to help me write, but the final content and opinions are my own.

Tuesday, July 11, 2023

Furious Five: Meta Launches Twitter Rival, AI at the Big 4, FTX relaunch & lawsuit, and Open-AI shuts off Browse-with-Bing

 

Meta vs Twitter: The Battle Begins

Meta's Threads Skyrockets to 100 Million Sign-Ups, Posing a Challenge to Twitter

Meta's social media platform, Threads, recorded 100 million sign-ups within five days of its launch, surpassing OpenAI's ChatGPT as the fastest-growing platform to reach this number. Seen as a potential rival to Twitter, Threads has attracted a broad user base including celebrities and politicians. Despite its rapid growth, it still lags behind Twitter's 240 million daily active users. Twitter has threatened to sue Meta, alleging Threads was built using its trade secrets. Threads supports posts up to 500 characters and media content but lacks a desktop version, direct messaging, and features like hashtags and keyword search. Meta has stated it will only consider monetization once Threads is on track to reach one billion users. (Source: CBC)

Balancing Act: Harnessing AI’s Potential in Tax and Accounting Amidst Regulatory Hurdles

Generative AI adoption is growing in tax and accounting firms, despite challenges like data privacy concerns and regulatory uncertainties. The technology, exemplified by OpenAI's ChatGPT, has potential for significant impacts but is also hindered by its limitations and the uncertainty of its economic effects. Major firms, including Ernst & Young, KPMG, Deloitte, and PwC, have invested in AI training and data analysis capabilities. However, AI's learning process raises data privacy issues, and regulators are lagging in addressing the fast-paced AI evolution. While AI has the potential to detect corporate fraud and revolutionize industries, firms need time for experimentation and learning to establish necessary standards and regulations. (Source: Bloomberg) 

Unveiling FTX 2.0: Relaunch Amidst Ongoing Crypto Crackdown

FTX is proceeding with its intentions to relaunch its primary global cryptocurrency exchange. WSJ, quoting Chief Executive John J. Ray III, reported that FTX  "has begun the process of soliciting interested parties to the reboot of the FTX.com exchange." The success of "FTX 2.0", however, is unclear. Despite its tattered reputation, the larger challenge may be overcoming the ongoing crackdown on crypto. (see here for our prior coverage of this) Source: WSJ)

Former FTX CCO Sued for Silencing Whistleblowers

FTX is also suing its former Chief Compliance Officer (CCO). Daniel Friedberg has been accused in a lawsuit filed by FTX and its debtors in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware of paying off whistleblowers to suppress information about the company's alleged fraudulent activities. The suit claims that Friedberg, who also served as the General Counsel for CEO Sam Bankman-Fried's crypto hedge fund, Alameda Research, disregarded internal control deficiencies and focused on keeping whistleblowers quiet while allowing the co-mingling of customer assets, which led to the downfall of both entities. (Source: Compliance Week)

ChatGPT Plus Users Lose Browsing: OpenAI Reacts to Paywall Concerns

OpenAI has temporarily disabled the 'Browse with Bing' feature in ChatGPT Plus due to concerns about bypassing paywalls and privacy settings. The decision follows user feedback that the feature was displaying full content from URLs, infringing on content owners' rights. Despite criticism from some users, OpenAI is working to fix the issue but has not specified when the feature will be back online. (Source: Yahoo Finance)

Author: Malik Datardina, CPA, CA, CISA. Malik works at Auvenir as a GRC Strategist that is working to transform the engagement experience for accounting firms and their clients. The opinions expressed here do not necessarily represent UWCISA, UW, Auvenir (or its affiliates), CPA Canada or anyone else. This post was written with the assistance of an AI language model. The model provided suggestions and completions to help me write, but the final content and opinions are my own.

Tuesday, July 4, 2023

The Furious Five (July 4th): Two Approaches to Voice-Enabled-AI, N. Arica's First Hydrogen Train, and Is GenAI about Amplification, not Abdication?

The Content Amplifier


The Worker's Dilemma: Blindly Obey the AI or Go With What you Know?

This insightful article explores the tension that arises when AI's recommendations conflict with worker experience, highlighting the limitations of AI in understanding nuances that are not digitized. The AI's effectiveness is only as good as the data it is trained on. A significant part of the issue often arises when end-user employees are not consulted early enough in the AI integration process. Inclusion from the beginning, rather than after several steps have been taken, is crucial to avoid creating distrust among workers towards their employers and the technology being used. This lack of early consultation can lead to resistance and skepticism towards the AI tools, undermining their potential benefits. (Source: WSJ)

Revolutionizing Canadian Railways: North America's First Hydrogen Train

The first hydrogen-powered train in North America is now operational in central Quebec, offering a two-and-a-half-hour trip to demonstrate the potential of hydrogen as a green alternative to diesel fuel. The train, manufactured by French company Alstom, runs from Montmorency Falls in Quebec City to Baie-Saint-Paul, carrying up to 120 passengers. The train uses about 50 kilograms of hydrogen per day, replacing approximately 500 liters of diesel. The hydrogen is produced by Harnois Énergies using an electrolyzer that splits water into hydrogen and oxygen. The electricity used in this process comes from Hydro-Quebec, which is primarily hydro-generated and almost fully decarbonized, making the resulting hydrogen green. The train emits only water vapor, a byproduct of the fuel cell process where hydrogen gas from the tank is combined with oxygen in the air to generate electricity. This project is part of Quebec's plan for a green economy by 2030, focusing on hydrogen to decarbonize sectors where conventional electrification isn't feasible. (Source: CBC)

About-Face on AI: Meta's Decision to Keep Voicebox Under Wraps

Meta has decided not to release its AI voice replication technology, Voicebox, due to potential misuse risks. Voicebox, which can replicate and imitate voices with high accuracy, has applications in audio editing, multilingual speech generation, and assistance for the visually impaired. However, concerns have been raised about its potential for misuse, such as scammers convincingly impersonating others. Even though Meta has published a detailed paper on Voicebox, offering insights into its workings and potential mitigation strategies, the company has chosen not to release the technology to prioritize responsibility over openness. This decision underscores the ethical and social questions surrounding AI innovation and the need to safeguard against unintended consequences. (Source: Ubergizmo)

Voice Design Meets Community: The Launch of Eleven Labs' Voice Library

In related news, Eleven Labs has launched the Voice Library, a community platform for generating, sharing, and exploring a vast range of synthetic voices. The platform uses their proprietary Voice Design tool, which allows users to create unique voices based on parameters such as age, gender, and accent. The voices are multilingual, maintaining their primary speech characteristics across all languages. The Voice Library is not just a repository, but a platform for discovery and sharing. Users can share their created voices with the community and browse voices shared by others for their own use-cases. All voices in the Voice Library are artificial and come with a free commercial use license. Users earn rewards when their shared voices are used by others. The company plans to add more features to the Voice Library in the future, including more labels for specific use-cases, language-specific voices and accents, improved search system, and time-limited and exclusive voices. The company previously came under fire for the troubles that Meta is looking to avoid. (Source: ElevenLabs)

Amplification, not Abdication: A Good Way to Look at Generative AI?

I've finally penned this Medium post, which makes the case that in the short term, the primary use case for generative AI will be to enable professionals and others to amplify their output. In other words, by inputting a few words, we can achieve a tenfold increase in output. Case-in-point: provide simple instructions, and you'll receive an email that requires only a few tweaks before it's ready to go. However, AI should not be used as an excuse to abdicate one's professional liability, as demonstrated by a lawyer who submitted fake cases manufactured by ChatGPT. To prove this point, the post conducts an 'A|B Test' that leverages Tim Ferriss's 4-hour work week. Specifically, I put generative AI to the test by assigning it tasks that were previously assigned to a remote virtual assistant (VA) located in India. Most of the post's length is taken up by the responses obtained from the generative AI, making it a quicker read than it appears at first glance. (Source: MalikAtMedium)

Author: Malik Datardina, CPA, CA, CISA. Malik works at Auvenir as a GRC Strategist that is working to transform the engagement experience for accounting firms and their clients. The opinions expressed here do not necessarily represent UWCISA, UW, Auvenir (or its affiliates), CPA Canada or anyone else. This post was written with the assistance of an AI language model. The model provided suggestions and completions to help me write, but the final content and opinions are my own