Meta’s new AI council is composed entirely of white men

WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 31: Mark Zuckerberg, CEO of Meta testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee at the Dirksen Senate Office Building on January 31, 2024 in Washington, DC. The committee heard testimony from the heads of the largest tech firms on the dangers of child sexual exploitation on social media. (

Image Credits: Alex Wong / Staff / Getty Images

Meta on Wednesday announced the creation of an AI advisory council with only white men on it. What else would we expect? Women and people of color have been speaking out for decades about being ignored and excluded from the world of artificial intelligence despite them being qualified and playing a key role in the evolution of this space. 

Meta did not immediately respond to our request to comment about the diversity of the advisory board. 

This new advisory board differs from Meta’s actual board of directors and its Oversight Board, which is more diverse in gender and racial representation. Shareholders did not elect this AI board, which also has no fiduciary duty. Meta told Bloomberg that the board would offer “insights and recommendations on technological advancements, innovation, and strategic growth opportunities.” It would meet “periodically.” 

It’s telling that the AI advisory council is composed entirely of businesspeople and entrepreneurs, not ethicists or anyone with an academic or deep research background. While one could argue that current and former Stripe, Shopify and Microsoft executives are well positioned to oversee Meta’s AI product roadmap given the immense number of products they’ve brought to market among them, it’s been proven time and time again that AI isn’t like other products. It’s a risky business, and the consequences of getting it wrong can be far-reaching, particularly for marginalized groups.

The women in AI making a difference

In a recent interview with TechCrunch, Sarah Myers West, managing director at the AI Now Institute, a nonprofit that studies the social implications of AI, said that it’s crucial to “critically examine” the institutions producing AI to “make sure the public’s needs [are] served.”

“This is error-prone technology, and we know from independent research that those errors are not distributed equally, they disproportionately harm communities that have long borne the brunt of discrimination,” she said. “We should be setting a much, much higher bar.”

Women are far more likely than men to experience the dark side of AI. Sensity AI found in 2019 that 96% of AI deepfake videos online were nonconsensual, sexually explicit videos. Generative AI has become far more prevalent since then, and women are still the targets of this violative behavior. 

In one high-profile incident from January, nonconsensual, pornographic deepfakes of Taylor Swift went viral on X, with one of the most widespread posts receiving hundreds of thousands of likes, and 45 million views. Social platforms like X have historically failed at protecting women from these circumstances — but since Taylor Swift is one of the most powerful women in the world, X intervened by banning search terms like “taylor swift ai” and taylor swift deepfake.”

But if this happens to you and you’re not a global pop sensation, then you might be out of luck. There are numerous reports of middle school and high school-aged students making explicit deepfakes of their classmates. While this technology has been around for a while, it’s never been easier to access — you don’t have to be technologically savvy to download apps that are specifically advertised to “undress” photos of women or swap their faces onto pornography. In fact, according to reporting by NBC’s Kat Tenbarge, Facebook and Instagram hosted ads for an app called Perky AI, which described itself as a tool to make explicit images. 

Two of the ads, which allegedly escaped Meta’s detection until Tenbarge alerted the company to the issue, showed photos of celebrities Sabrina Carpenter and Jenna Ortega with their bodies blurred out, urging customers to prompt the app to remove their clothes. The ads used an image of Ortega from when she was just 16 years old.

The mistake of allowing Perky AI to advertise was not an isolated incident. Meta’s Oversight Board recently opened investigations into the company’s failure to handle reports of sexually explicit, AI-generated content. 

It is imperative for women’s and people of color’s voices to be included in the innovation of artificial intelligence products. For so long, such marginalized groups have been excluded from the development of world-changing technologies and research, and the results have been disastrous. 

An easy example is the fact that until the 1970s, women were excluded from clinical trials, meaning entire fields of research developed without the understanding of how it would impact women. Black people, in particular, see the impacts of technology built without them in mind — for example, self-driving cars are more likely to hit them because their sensors might have a harder time detecting Black skin, according to a 2019 study done by the Georgia Institute of Technology. 

Algorithms trained on already discriminatory data only regurgitate the same biases that humans have trained them to adopt. Broadly, we already see AI systems perpetuating and amplifying racial discrimination in employment, housing and criminal justice. Voice assistants struggle to understand diverse accents and often flag the work by non-native English speakers as being AI-generated since, as Axios noted, English is AI’s native tongue. Facial recognition systems flag Black people as possible matches for criminal suspects more often than white people. 

The current development of AI embodies the same existing power structures regarding class, race, gender and Eurocentrism that we see elsewhere, and it seems not enough leaders are addressing it. Instead, they are reinforcing it. Investors, founders and tech leaders are so focused on moving fast and breaking things that they can’t seem to understand that generative AI — the hot AI tech of the moment — could make the problems worse, not better. According to a report from McKinsey, AI could automate roughly half of all jobs that don’t require a four-year degree and pay over $42,000 annually, jobs in which minority workers are overrepresented. 

There is cause to worry about how a team of all-white men at one of the most prominent tech companies in the world, engaging in this race to save the world using AI, could ever advise on products for all people when only one narrow demographic is represented. It will take a massive effort to build technology that everyone — truly everyone — could use. In fact, the layers needed to actually build safe and inclusive AI — from the research to the understanding on an intersectional societal level — are so intricate that it’s almost obvious that this advisory board will not help Meta get it right. At least where Meta falls short, another startup could arise.

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Humane, the creator of the $700 Ai Pin, is reportedly seeking a buyer

Humane Ai Pin

Image Credits: Humane / Humane

Humane, the company behind the much-hyped Ai Pin that launched to less-than-glowing reviews last month, is on the hunt for a buyer, Bloomberg reported, citing anonymous sources.

The company has reportedly priced itself between $750 million and $1 billion, and the sale process is in the early stages, Bloomberg cited the sources as saying.

Humane has never revealed an official valuation at any of its funding rounds, though The Information reported last year that its valuation was $850 million.

Humane did not immediately respond to requests for comment on the report.

A pin in a haystack

Founded in 2017 by former Apple executives Bethany Bongiorno and Imran Chaudhri, Humane had raised around $230 million from backers such as Microsoft, Qualcomm Ventures, Marc Benioff, and OpenAI’s Sam Altman before any part of its product was even publicly revealed.

The company finally unveiled its product last June: Called Ai Pin, it’s a wearable gadget with a projected display and AI-powered features. The reveal kicked off a period of pre-orders in the U.S., but the launch was delayed before the Ai Pin finally dropped in mid-April.

The Ai Pin sports a unique form factor and is packed with sensors, generative AI and a small projector that can beam a display onto any surface — such as your hand.

Humane in action
Humane in action.
Image Credits: Humane / Humane

But with a price tag of $700, plus a recurring $24 monthly subscription that gives the user a phone number and unlimited data to power as many queries as they can muster, the Ai Pin seemed to be a tough sell in a cash-strapped consumer market. In some ways, the device seemed like a solution in search of a problem, and many of its initial reviews said the Ai Pin doesn’t really do much more than what you can already do with your smartphone.

High-profile YouTuber and reviewer Marques Brownlee, known as MKBHD, gave a particularly damning review, which many said could single-handedly kill the Ai Pin before it had properly launched.

Throw into the mix complaints around battery life and overheating issues, not to mention other emerging (and cheaper) smart gadgets such as Meta’s Ray-Bans and Rabbit’s R1, and it has seemed increasingly unlikely that Humane would be able to gain any kind of meaningful foothold in the wearable market.

Also, it’s worth noting that the company’s chief technology officer (CTO), Patrick Gates, who joined Humane in 2019 after 13 years at Apple, left the company in January alongside 4% of the workforce.

All in all, things haven’t seemed rosy at Humane for a while, so the news that it might be seeking a buyer isn’t hugely surprising. Whether any suitor is willing to bite, though, is very much in the balance.

Praktika raises $35.5M to use AI avatars to make learning languages feel more natural

Praktika app

Image Credits: Praktika app

Most apps that help you learn languages have features where you select options or swipe away wrong answer cards — you’re more or less interacting with a machine. Language-learning app Praktika is adopting a different approach: It lets you create personalized AI-powered avatars to replicate the experience of having a private tutor, leveraging inflections like tone of voice and emotions to help make learning a language feel more natural.

Praktika claims to have 1.2 million active monthly users across 100 countries and said it generated revenue of almost $20 million in the last 12 months. To keep growing, the startup has now secured a $35.5 million Series A funding round led by Blossom Capital. The round follows a previously unannounced $2.5 million seed fundraise that was led by Creator Ventures and Blue Wire Capital. 

Praktika’s users interact with AI avatars who then “tailor” lessons for you and can speak with several accents, such as American, British, Asian, and Indian. The more the learner interacts with the avatar, the more tailored the lessons will become — at least that’s the idea.

The company’s founding team, Adam Turaev (CEO), Anton Marin (CTO) and Ilya Chernyakov (CPO), previously built Cleverbots, an AI service business that counted companies like Coca-Cola, Kimberly-Clark, and AstraZeneca among its clients. 

“Most language learning apps are all about human interaction, with a human tutor. Or it is ‘machine-to-human’ interaction involving clicks and drag and drops,” Turaev told TechCrunch. “But we are the only app out there about tone of voice, where you mimic human-to-human interaction. We were the first to master this AI avatar approach, which is very natural to language learning. So that’s what really makes it different from any other app that you can see on the market right now.”

When asked how the startup is using AI, he said, “We orchestrate different LLMs, but we’re an AI-native company. We have used GPT-4, GP Turbo, Gemini, Claude, and Mistral. We experiment with different versions of their models as well. We gathered a lot of training data, and the app still learns. We have terabytes of this human-to-AI interaction data. We use anonymized data to reinforce the models.”

“Praktika’s founding team is bringing its deep knowledge of AI to create a fun, affordable way to learn languages with personalized AI tutors. For too long, other learning apps have taken students for granted and shortchanged them. The team’s determination to build a global challenger has translated into one of the fastest-growing early-stage consumer AI companies globally,” Ophelia Brown, managing partner of Blossom Capital, said in a statement.

Both the seed round and the recent Series A saw participation from prominent figures like Carles Reina (ElevenLabs) and Patrice Evra (five-time Premier League champion).

Sasha Kaletsky, managing partner at Creator Ventures, added in a statement: “Learning a language is a basic human experience, and the Praktika team has successfully injected this human-like element into the product using AI … Over a million learners worldwide are improving their English with Praktika already, and this is just the start.”

Granola debuts an AI notepad for meetings

Image Credits: Granola

Taking meeting notes is a chore, so why not leave that task to AI? That’s the premise behind a new startup, Granola, whose AI-powered notepad app lets you combine your own notes with those created by AI based on a transcript of your meeting. Unlike some other AI transcription apps that try to summarize the key points of a meeting on their own, Granola takes a more collaborative approach to working with AI. You can opt to guide the AI by writing down what you think the most important takeaways were from the meeting and allow the AI to fill in the details.

Co-founder Chris Pedregal says he was inspired to build Granola after working with GPT-3 when it was new. He experimented with different prototypes to figure out how AI could be useful in his everyday life. AI’s utility was something that drove him to create his prior company, Socratic, an AI tutoring app that allowed people to take a photo of a homework problem and have it teach the user how to solve it. The company sold to Google, and Pedregal stayed at the tech giant for a couple of years before getting the itch to build again.

Building different tools, including an AI journaling app at one point, led to a realization.

“Through that process, I just became convinced that LLMs [large language models] were going to change the tools we use for work. It’s especially powerful when it comes to spoken language and making that useful,” Pedregal said.

Image Credits: Granola

He later teamed up with co-founder Sam Stephenson, who previously worked at the note-taking app Ideaflow. The two initially met through a meetup group focused on tools for meeting. Like Pedregal, Stephenson was also based in London, so the two ended up meeting in real life and found they got along. “Now we’re basically married,” Stephenson joked.

The two founded Granola in March 2023 with the goal of making it easier to manage meeting notes.

“People spend a crazy amount of time in meetings, especially since the pandemic — like Zoom meetings in particular,” Pedregal said. Many are in back-to-back meetings all day without time to review, write or clean up their prior notes. In addition, for most people, meetings are the only time they take notes; they don’t often take notes in other parts of their lives.”

Granola works to solve the note-taking problem with an app that’s essentially an AI-powered evolution of something like Apple Notes. You engage with Granola on your computer, and you can choose to write your own notes or bullet points, or leave it all up to the AI. The app works by connecting to your calendar, then transcribing the Mac’s audio directly. That means no meeting bots are joining your online meetings, as with other solutions. Currently, Granola works with Zoom, Google Meet, Teams, Slack and WebEx.

The app essentially works like a regular notepad, meaning you can type your own notes during the meeting. Granola, however, analyzes who’s in the meeting, their roles and what the meeting is about — like a sales call, job interview or investor pitch, for example. When the meeting wraps, Granola augments your notes with more information, referencing the transcript as it fleshes them out. If you make typos or forget to capitalize things, Granola will handle that during the cleanup, too.

Image Credits: Granola

For example, if someone says during the meeting that a project’s budget is $10K, you might just write “10K” in your notes. When Granola comes back in, it will expand that to include more information, like “Photography budget can go up to 10K.”

Image Credits: Granola

Granola’s notes are hyperlinked to the transcript summary so you can fact-check them for accuracy or just reference what was said in full. The AI notes are also written in gray to differentiate them from your own notes, in black.

The app uses OpenAI’s GPT-4o, which means you can also engage with it as you would ChatGPT.

Pedregal thinks Granola is an improvement over other meeting transcription tools, because it doesn’t just summarize the meeting via AI: It allows you to write your own notes and even collaborate with the AI. You can use Markdown formatting to guide the AI by typing out headings preceded by a pound sign, for example, and it will know to add bullet points referencing that topic underneath.

“Right now we’re outsourcing a lot of our thinking to LLMs, like ChatGPt. And we have very little control over it,” Pedregal said. “You ask ChatGPT to write an email for you and it’ll write it and it’s magical. But then if you get it to write an email that you would actually send … it’s super hard. It’s almost more trouble than it’s worth. I think that’s the big question right now: How do you design AI so that you’re still in control? You’re still using your judgment, but it’s helping you do your best work?”

Image Credits: Granola

Fueling Granola’s launch is a $4.25 million round of funding, closed last year and led by Lightspeed. Other investors include Betaworks, Firstminute Capital, Otherwise, Uncommon and angels like Mike Krieger, Soleio, Hunter Walk, David Lieb, Mike Hudack, Gabor Cselle and Andrew Parker. 

Longer-term, Pedregal says the team would like to expand beyond meetings to whatever the next steps may involve, like writing a memo, filing a bug report, scheduling a follow-up and more.

Granola is free to use for the first 25 meetings, then is a reasonable $10 per month. Over time, the startup aims to generate additional revenue with the launches of a team or company plan where pricing may be adjusted. The app is free to download on macOS.

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TikTok turns to generative AI to boost its ads business

A laptop keyboard and TikTok logo displayed on a phone screen are seen in this multiple exposure illustration photo taken in Poland on March 17, 2024. (Photo by Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Image Credits: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto / Getty Images

TikTok is the latest tech company to incorporate generative AI into its ads business, as the company announced on Tuesday that it’s launching a new “TikTok Symphony” AI suite for brands. The tools will help marketers write scripts, produce videos and enhance current assets.

The suite includes a new AI video generator called the “Symphony Creative Studio.” The tool can generate TikTok-ready videos with just a few inputs from an advertiser, the company claims. The studio also offers brands ready-to-use videos for ad campaigns based on their TikTok Ads Manager assets or product information.

TikTok's new AI video generator
Image Credits: TikTok

The new “Symphony Assistant” is an AI assistant that is designed to help advertisers enhance their campaigns by helping them generate and refine scripts, and provide recommendations on best practices. 

For instance, brands can ask the assistant to write a few attention-grabbing lines for their new lipstick launch. They can also ask the assistant to show them what’s currently trending on TikTok or to generate some ideas for promoting a new product in a specific industry. 

TikTok’s new “Symphony Ads Manager Integration” can help brands automatically fix and optimize a brand’s current videos. The tool can be used to spruce up videos that a brand has already created to make it stand out more. 

Image Credits: TikTok

In addition, TikTok is launching a centralized destination for marketers called “TikTok One” where they will be able to access nearly two million creators, discover agency partners and leverage TikTok’s creative tools.

TikTok is also introducing new performance solutions with the help of predictive AI to help advertisers drive more sales. Advertisers will be able to input their budgets and goals to determine the best creative asset and the right audience for their campaign.  

As part of the announcement, the company revealed that 61% of users have made a purchase either directly on TikTok or after seeing an ad. TikTok also said that 59% of users use TikTok to decide which game to download next and that 52% of users even research cars because of TikTok content they have seen.

While TikTok is seeing success with its ads business and building it out as it chases more ad dollars, the company faces a potential hurdle in the year ahead. The fate of the app’s future in the U.S. is uncertain as President Joe Biden signed a bill last month that would ban TikTok if its parent company ByteDance does not sell the app. If the app does get banned in the U.S., other tech companies and startups may have the potential to gain ground in its gaping absence.

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