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- 💸 YouTubers Cash In: Selling Footage to Fuel AI Boom
💸 YouTubers Cash In: Selling Footage to Fuel AI Boom
Content Creators Find Lucrative Market in Exclusive Video Deals for AI Training

Hello! 👋👋
Here are 5 things you missed today in the world of AI. Because we get it, life is busy & who has the time to sit around and keep up with the fastest moving industry right now - here are 5 things we think you need to know in the world of AI.
1 - 💸 YouTubers Cash In: Selling Footage to Fuel AI Boom
Facing the rise of AI, YouTubers and other digital creators are discovering a lucrative new revenue stream: selling their unused video footage to AI companies. These companies, including OpenAI and Google, are eager to acquire unique, unpublished content to enhance the training of their AI algorithms, often paying creators thousands of dollars per deal.
2 -📱 Free AI Chatbot Now Available on iPhones
xAI has released a standalone iOS app for its Grok chatbot in the US. The free app allows users to field real-time information, answer questions, and generate images, similar to the functionality of the chatbot built into X. Grok was initially only available to X Premium subscribers, but is now free for all users.
3 -❌ X: The Grokification of Social Media
Elon Musk's xAI is quietly integrating its Grok AI model into every corner of X. 1 From AI-powered post suggestions to location-based queries, X is rapidly becoming a testing ground for Musk's ambitions to dominate both social media and the AI landscape.
4 -💰Nvidia Unveils $3,000 AI Supercomputer, Democratizing Access to Cutting-Edge Research
Nvidia stunned CES attendees with the reveal of Project Digits, a powerful AI supercomputer priced at just $3,000. This compact device aims to democratize access to advanced AI development, empowering researchers, smaller companies, and universities to train cutting-edge models without the need for massive data centers or exorbitant cloud costs.
5 -🫸🏻 Nvidia Pushes Back Against Biden's AI Chip Export Controls
Nvidia has strongly criticized the Biden administration's proposed AI chip export restrictions, calling them a misguided policy that could harm U.S. innovation and economic interests. The rules, aimed at limiting chip access for certain nations, have sparked debate over national security and global trade dynamics. Nvidia executives argue the measures may stifle progress, urging reconsideration before the administration transitions.
Written by AI Bulletin team - Australia
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