diff --git a/_events/2024-10-17-connected-conversation-gen-ai.md b/_events/2024-10-17-connected-conversation-gen-ai.md index a912680..0df735e 100644 --- a/_events/2024-10-17-connected-conversation-gen-ai.md +++ b/_events/2024-10-17-connected-conversation-gen-ai.md @@ -18,8 +18,6 @@ Across industries, companies are seeking to exploit content generated by their w -Across industries, companies are seeking to exploit content generated by their workers past and present to create customised generative AI. We’re seeing this a lot in creative industries, and so a lot of the conversation about the impact of generative AI has focused on that. But the same pattern is appearing across journalism, education, the legal profession, public sector, research and consultancy. - Wherever people write documents, the organisations that own the rights to that text – often their employers – are aiming to reuse it to build or customise AI language models. We’re also seeing organisations introducing general purpose generative AI tools thanks to their incorporation into office suites, such as Microsoft Copilot and Google’s Gemini, or just expecting (or blocking) workers from using ChatGPT.