Remove is-your-ai-model-leaking-intellectual-property
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Is Your AI Model Leaking Intellectual Property?

Dataversity

Businesses often employ AI in applications to unlock intelligent functionality like predicting relevant product recommendations for customers. Recently, businesses have started building AI-powered applications that provide predictive functionality using sensitive information — a significant benefit to users.

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Generative AI: 5 enterprise predictions for AI and security — for 2023, 2024, and beyond

CIO

From IT, to finance, marketing, engineering, and more, AI advances are causing enterprises to re-evaluate their traditional approaches to unlock the transformative potential of AI. What can enterprises learn from these trends, and what future enterprise developments can we expect around generative AI?

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IT leaders grapple with shadow AI

CIO

Soon after ChatGPT burst on the scene in November 2022, Chan realized generative AI would amount to far more than the just the latest technology flash-in-the-pan. Even if you say, ‘Don’t use it,’ your employees or customers are going to use it,” she says. That could lead to compromised intellectual property and regulatory penalties.

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7 key questions CIOs need to answer before committing to generative AI

CIO

Some companies use generative AI to write code and some use it to create marketing text or fuel chatbots. SmileDirectClub, the UK-based teledentistry company, uses generative AI to create teeth. Existing generative AI platforms like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google Bard, or Stable Diffusion aren’t trained on 3D images of teeth.

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Making intelligent automation work at scale

CIO

But adding artificial intelligence (AI) to the mix is where an even bigger payoff can come. Organizations have been combining automation and AI technologies for a few years now to improve their business processes,” says Maureen Fleming, program vice president at research firm IDC. “AI