Victor Riparbelli
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
You check it against that just to see if disinformation, one of the big problems about what people mostly do, right, is that they take a picture from a war five years ago, and they say, this happened yesterday in whatever country. And if you had a system like this, if I tried to do that, actually what it would do is it would say, well, this picture was uploaded five years ago.
So when you're looking at this picture, It'll have, you know, a little block of notes on the community notes, right? But automated version of community notes saying this picture was actually taken by a BBC journalist like seven years ago. A lot of this stuff is hard, but we actually have a lot of the piece of the technology to get there.
So when you're looking at this picture, It'll have, you know, a little block of notes on the community notes, right? But automated version of community notes saying this picture was actually taken by a BBC journalist like seven years ago. A lot of this stuff is hard, but we actually have a lot of the piece of the technology to get there.
So when you're looking at this picture, It'll have, you know, a little block of notes on the community notes, right? But automated version of community notes saying this picture was actually taken by a BBC journalist like seven years ago. A lot of this stuff is hard, but we actually have a lot of the piece of the technology to get there.
And I think when we think of like content identity verification, we think of moderation, content creation, I think we are beginning to see the birth of an entire new content ecosystem that will look very different than what we have today.
And I think when we think of like content identity verification, we think of moderation, content creation, I think we are beginning to see the birth of an entire new content ecosystem that will look very different than what we have today.
And I think when we think of like content identity verification, we think of moderation, content creation, I think we are beginning to see the birth of an entire new content ecosystem that will look very different than what we have today.
I think the very technical roles like camera operation, those types of things, they'll probably like fade away. And I think a lot of emphasis will be put on creativity, storytelling, being relatable, all those things that makes great content, I think will be more important than ever.
I think the very technical roles like camera operation, those types of things, they'll probably like fade away. And I think a lot of emphasis will be put on creativity, storytelling, being relatable, all those things that makes great content, I think will be more important than ever.
I think the very technical roles like camera operation, those types of things, they'll probably like fade away. And I think a lot of emphasis will be put on creativity, storytelling, being relatable, all those things that makes great content, I think will be more important than ever.
I actually think that most of those roles will have a natural transition to something different, assuming that you're open-minded enough to do it. So visual effects, for example, right? As we talked about before with making clips, AI can do a first pass as it, which may be better than random, but it's way worse than what you can sit down and do yourself, right?
I actually think that most of those roles will have a natural transition to something different, assuming that you're open-minded enough to do it. So visual effects, for example, right? As we talked about before with making clips, AI can do a first pass as it, which may be better than random, but it's way worse than what you can sit down and do yourself, right?
I actually think that most of those roles will have a natural transition to something different, assuming that you're open-minded enough to do it. So visual effects, for example, right? As we talked about before with making clips, AI can do a first pass as it, which may be better than random, but it's way worse than what you can sit down and do yourself, right?
but you plus ai can probably be really really good right because if it's a two-hour episode it just figures out like all the right places that could be interesting and shows you that you can kind of choose yourself if you're a visual effects artist probably what it means that you'll just like a software engineer right means that you'll probably be 100 times as efficient and instead of relying on 20 other people to create a digital clone of me by like modeling my face you just prompt it or control the river i think if you're good at that you'll be even more powerful in this new world
but you plus ai can probably be really really good right because if it's a two-hour episode it just figures out like all the right places that could be interesting and shows you that you can kind of choose yourself if you're a visual effects artist probably what it means that you'll just like a software engineer right means that you'll probably be 100 times as efficient and instead of relying on 20 other people to create a digital clone of me by like modeling my face you just prompt it or control the river i think if you're good at that you'll be even more powerful in this new world
but you plus ai can probably be really really good right because if it's a two-hour episode it just figures out like all the right places that could be interesting and shows you that you can kind of choose yourself if you're a visual effects artist probably what it means that you'll just like a software engineer right means that you'll probably be 100 times as efficient and instead of relying on 20 other people to create a digital clone of me by like modeling my face you just prompt it or control the river i think if you're good at that you'll be even more powerful in this new world
I think we'll have much more content creators than we have today. Just like if you look at pre-internet, pre-computers, how many people wrote things? Very few people, right? Like in the 1930s or 40s, most people didn't like create text. There was like specific people like secretaries and then typewriters later on. Now all of us produce content all the time. And I think that'll be a big trend.
I think we'll have much more content creators than we have today. Just like if you look at pre-internet, pre-computers, how many people wrote things? Very few people, right? Like in the 1930s or 40s, most people didn't like create text. There was like specific people like secretaries and then typewriters later on. Now all of us produce content all the time. And I think that'll be a big trend.
I think we'll have much more content creators than we have today. Just like if you look at pre-internet, pre-computers, how many people wrote things? Very few people, right? Like in the 1930s or 40s, most people didn't like create text. There was like specific people like secretaries and then typewriters later on. Now all of us produce content all the time. And I think that'll be a big trend.
I think most of the rate limiting and how quickly AI becomes a part of our daily life is actually not the technology. As I said earlier, I think we have very, very powerful LLMs that they can do a lot of great things. But the rate limiter is people, right? Because people have to use these things, have to trust these things, have to pay them, buy them, integrate them.