The Cosmos Institute, whose founding fellows include Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark, launches grant programs and an AI lab

Image Credits: Getty Images

The Cosmos Institute, a nonprofit whose founding fellows include Anthropic co-founder Jack Clark and former Defense Department technologist Brendan McCord, has announced a venture program and research initiatives to — in the organization’s words — “cultivate a new generation of technologists and entrepreneurs equipped with deep philosophical thinking to navigate the uncharted territory of our AI age.”

In a blog post, McCord, Cosmos’ chair, said that the Institute will found an AI lab at the University of Oxford called the Human-Centered AI Lab, or “HAI Lab” for short. It’ll be led by Oxford philosopher Philipp Koralus — another of the Institute’s founding fellows — and will aim to “translate the philosophical principles of human flourishing into open source software and AI systems.”

What does “translating the philosophical principles of human flourishing” entail, exactly? Unclear. But the crux is to foster the creation of AI tech that respects human dignity while avoiding promoting harmful disruption (e.g., automation leading to job loss). A high and nebulous bar, to be sure — but one the HAI Lab is going to strive for.

The Institute is also spinning up a fellowship — the Cosmos Fellowship — with a cohort of four fellows to start. Working at the HAI Lab or other partner institutions for between “a term and a year,” fellows will collaborate with Cosmos mentors and pursue independent projects to “[explore the] intersection of AI expertise and deep philosophical insight,” McCord said.

There’s an investment component to the Institute’s plans, and it’s launching in the form of a venture org: Cosmos Ventures. Led by former DeepMind product lead Jason Zhao, ex-Stripe head of corporate strategy Alex Komoroske, Darren Zhu, and Zoe Weinberg, Cosmos Ventures will support “provocative new prototypes, essays and creative projects that explore fundamental questions around the philosophy of technology,” McCord said.

McCord characterizes Cosmos Ventures as “low overhead,” modeled after Institute fellow Tyler Cowen’s Emergent Ventures. Investments will range between $1,000 and $10,000 per project, and projects — which can be new or existing — must produce a “major deliverable” within three months.

The first group has already been funded, McCord said.

The Cosmos Institute isn’t the first to attempt to advance a more ethical, humanistic vision of AI. OpenAI, founded with the mission of delivering the benefits of advanced AI to all humanity, has dismantled entire safety teams. Clark’s own Anthropic once positioned itself as a safer, more ethical vendor, but in recent months has pushed back on AI regulations and aggressively scraped data without permission.

Perhaps the Cosmos Institute will fare better with its embrace of what McCord calls “accelerationism”: the idea that the future isn’t predetermined and therefore humanity is responsible for what it holds.

“We must build AI that encourages inquiry over complacency and promotes active engagement over passive dependence, especially in education, medicine, the public square and other vital domains,” McCord writes. “We champion AI that decentralizes power and enables bottom-up solutions, allowing individuals and communities to co-create a richer, more diverse society.”

They’re admirable positions. This reporter only hopes that money, influence and power don’t make the temptation to abandon them irresistible.

TikTok ads will now include AI avatars of creators and stock actors

A laptop keyboard and TikTok logo displayed on a phone screen are seen in this multiple exposure illustration.

Image Credits: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto / Getty Images

TikTok announced on Monday that it’s introducing generative AI avatars of creators and stock actors for branded content and ads on its platform. The company is also launching an “AI Dubbing” tool for creators and brands to expand the reach of their ads and branded content. 

The new “Custom Avatars” are designed to represent a creator or a brand spokesperson. Creators can choose to scale their likeness to create multilingual avatars to expand their global reach and brand collaborations, TikTok says. Brands can create avatars with their spokesperson or a creator they have partnered with to localize their global campaigns. 

There are also new “Stock Avatars,” which are pre-built avatars created using paid actors who are licensed for commercial use. The idea behind these avatars is to give businesses a way to add a human touch to their content. TikTok says the avatars are created with actors from a range of backgrounds, nationalities and languages. 

Image Credits: TikTok

The launch of the new tools might be concerning for some. Hollywood actors went on strike last year over several different concerns about AI, including the fear that their likenesses would be used to generate AI replicas. With TikTok’s new AI avatars, creators have control over whether they want their likeness used. Creators can also determine their rates, licensing and who can use their avatar.

As for the new AI Dubbing tool, it will allow creators and brands to translate their content into 10 languages, including English, Japanese, Korean and Spanish. It automatically detects the language in a video, and then transcribes and translates the content to produce a dubbed video in the preferred language. TikTok says the new feature lets creators and brands communicate with global audiences. 

The launch comes as TikTok recently revealed that 61% of users have made a purchase either directly on TikTok or after seeing an ad.

The new features will be available as part of “TikTok Symphony,” the company’s suite of ads solutions powered by generative AI, which was launched in May. The suite includes tools to help marketers write scripts, produce videos and enhance current assets. 

TikTok is building out its ads business despite facing a potential ban in the U.S. if its parent company, ByteDance, fails to sell the app within a year.

TikTok ads will now include AI avatars of creators and stock actors

A laptop keyboard and TikTok logo displayed on a phone screen are seen in this multiple exposure illustration.

Image Credits: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto / Getty Images

TikTok announced on Monday that it’s introducing generative AI avatars of creators and stock actors for branded content and ads on its platform. The company is also launching an “AI Dubbing” tool for creators and brands to expand the reach of their ads and branded content. 

The new “Custom Avatars” are designed to represent a creator or a brand spokesperson. Creators can choose to scale their likeness to create multilingual avatars to expand their global reach and brand collaborations, TikTok says. Brands can create avatars with their spokesperson or a creator they have partnered with to localize their global campaigns. 

There are also new “Stock Avatars,” which are pre-built avatars created using paid actors who are licensed for commercial use. The idea behind these avatars is to give businesses a way to add a human touch to their content. TikTok says the avatars are created with actors from a range of backgrounds, nationalities and languages. 

Image Credits: TikTok

The launch of the new tools might be concerning for some. Hollywood actors went on strike last year over several different concerns about AI, including the fear that their likenesses would be used to generate AI replicas. With TikTok’s new AI avatars, creators have control over whether they want their likeness used. Creators can also determine their rates, licensing and who can use their avatar.

As for the new AI Dubbing tool, it will allow creators and brands to translate their content into 10 languages, including English, Japanese, Korean and Spanish. It automatically detects the language in a video, and then transcribes and translates the content to produce a dubbed video in the preferred language. TikTok says the new feature lets creators and brands communicate with global audiences. 

The launch comes as TikTok recently revealed that 61% of users have made a purchase either directly on TikTok or after seeing an ad.

The new features will be available as part of “TikTok Symphony,” the company’s suite of ads solutions powered by generative AI, which was launched in May. The suite includes tools to help marketers write scripts, produce videos and enhance current assets. 

TikTok is building out its ads business despite facing a potential ban in the U.S. if its parent company, ByteDance, fails to sell the app within a year.

TikTok ads will now include AI avatars of creators and stock actors

A laptop keyboard and TikTok logo displayed on a phone screen are seen in this multiple exposure illustration.

Image Credits: Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto / Getty Images

TikTok announced on Monday that it’s introducing generative AI avatars of creators and stock actors for branded content and ads on its platform. The company is also launching an “AI Dubbing” tool for creators and brands to expand the reach of their ads and branded content. 

The new “Custom Avatars” are designed to represent a creator or a brand spokesperson. Creators can choose to scale their likeness to create multilingual avatars to expand their global reach and brand collaborations, TikTok says. Brands can create avatars with their spokesperson or a creator they have partnered with to localize their global campaigns. 

There are also new “Stock Avatars,” which are pre-built avatars created using paid actors who are licensed for commercial use. The idea behind these avatars is to give businesses a way to add a human touch to their content. TikTok says the avatars are created with actors from a range of backgrounds, nationalities and languages. 

Image Credits: TikTok

The launch of the new tools might be concerning for some. Hollywood actors went on strike last year over several different concerns about AI, including the fear that their likenesses would be used to generate AI replicas. With TikTok’s new AI avatars, creators have control over whether they want their likeness used. Creators can also determine their rates, licensing and who can use their avatar.

As for the new AI Dubbing tool, it will allow creators and brands to translate their content into 10 languages, including English, Japanese, Korean and Spanish. It automatically detects the language in a video, and then transcribes and translates the content to produce a dubbed video in the preferred language. TikTok says the new feature lets creators and brands communicate with global audiences. 

The launch comes as TikTok recently revealed that 61% of users have made a purchase either directly on TikTok or after seeing an ad.

The new features will be available as part of “TikTok Symphony,” the company’s suite of ads solutions powered by generative AI, which was launched in May. The suite includes tools to help marketers write scripts, produce videos and enhance current assets. 

TikTok is building out its ads business despite facing a potential ban in the U.S. if its parent company, ByteDance, fails to sell the app within a year.