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Fox News AI Newsletter: Mr. Miyagi’s dramatic return

Welcome to Fox News' Artificial Intelligence Newsletter, featuring the latest advancements in AI technology.

In today's newsletter:

– 'Cobra Kai' uses AI to bring back 'Karate Kid' characters in controversial 'Nightmare' scene
– NVIDIA stock falls despite optimistic predictions for the 'age of AI'
– AI-powered robot dog can smell invading fire ants

Pat Morita sitting in a chair

Actor Pat Morita filming the short film “Talk to Taka” in Los Angeles on August 9, 2000. (Bob Riha Jr./Getty Images)

Wax on, wax off: Using Netflix's “Cobra Kai” artificial intelligence To bring back one of the most influential characters in the “Best Kid” universe, the late Pat Morita's Mr. Miyagi.

“The era of AI”: Nvidia released an earnings report Wednesday, predicting fourth-quarter revenue to beat Wall Street expectations, but investors balked after the numbers fell short of high expectations in the United States. artificial intelligence The giants have profited during their historic rise.

robot dog 1

CyberDog designed to find fire ant nests (Dr. Qiu Hualong, Guangdong Forestry Academy)

K-9 Pest Patrol: High-tech dogs are trained to sniff out invasive fire ants. artificial intelligence Locate nests with amazing accuracy. This breakthrough could change the way we manage invasive species and protect the environment.

Machine bias: On Tuesday, the Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights released executive order guidance explaining how schools' use of artificial intelligence can be discriminatory against minority and transgender students, and It said it was “likely” that he would be the subject of a federal investigation.

This photo illustration created in Washington DC on November 16, 2023 shows an AI Girl generator in front of an image of a school bus. Ellis, a 14-year-old from Texas, woke up one morning in October to several missed calls and text messages, all about the same thing. Her nude images were reportedly circulating on social media. Even if she didn't actually take the photo, artificial intelligence would "deep fake" It becomes more and more realistic. The source image of Ellis and a fellow victim's friend was removed from Instagram, with his face placed over the naked body below. Other students, all girls, were also targeted and their photos were shared on Snapchat with other classmates.

This photo illustration created in Washington DC on November 16, 2023 shows an AI Girl generator in front of an image of a school bus. Ellis, a 14-year-old from Texas, woke up one October morning to several missed calls and text messages, all with the same message. That is, her nude images were circulating on social media. It doesn't matter that she didn't actually take the photo, because artificial intelligence is making so-called “deepfakes” increasingly viable. The source image of Ellis and a fellow victim's friend was removed from Instagram, and its face was placed over the naked body below. Other students, all girls, were also targeted and their photos were shared on Snapchat with other classmates. ((Photo by Stephanie Reynolds/AFP) (Photo by Stephanie Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images))

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