
TikTok asks users to help police misinformation
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Hindustan Times
28 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
‘India set to become…': PM Modi after Trump's ‘dead economy' remark
Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Saturday indirectly responded to former US President Donald Trump's recent remarks labelling India's economy as 'dead,' asserting that India is poised to become the world's third-largest economy and must remain vigilant in protecting its interests amid global instability. Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses a public meeting, in Varanasi.(PMO) Addressing a rally in Varanasi, PM Modi stressed the importance of economic self-reliance and reiterated his government's commitment to farmers, small industries, and youth employment. His remarks came just days after Trump announced a 25% tariff on Indian imports and warned of further economic penalties over India's continued trade with Russia. 'There is an atmosphere of global instability. All countries are focusing on their individual interests. India is set to become the third biggest economy in the world, and that is why India will have to stay alert as far as its economic interests are concerned,' the Prime Minister said. While Modi did not mention Trump by name, his comments were seen as a veiled retort to the US President's assertion that India's economy had "tanked" and that it relies heavily on American markets. Underscoring India's economic resilience, Modi called on citizens and the business community to support indigenous production through a renewed commitment to the 'vocal for local' movement. 'We will buy only those things that are made by Indians. We need to become vocal for local,' he urged the crowd, calling for a nationwide resolve to buy and promote 'swadeshi' products. 'Those who want the best for the country and want to see India as the third biggest economy in the world, be it any political party, should leave their differences aside and instil a resolution for 'swadeshi' products,' he added. The Prime Minister further said that the government's highest priority remains ensuring the welfare of farmers, small-scale industries, and employment generation. 'Our farmers, our small-scale industries, the employment for youth — their interest is our top priority. The government is doing everything it can in the best interest of the country. However, there are some responsibilities we have as citizens,' he said. PM Modi also made a direct appeal to India's business community, urging them to prioritize domestic products, especially in light of global disruptions. 'I also want to say to my brothers and sisters in the business community — the world is going through instability, and we should commit to selling only swadeshi goods,' he said. Earlier in the day, Modi inaugurated and laid the foundation stone for infrastructure projects worth ₹2,200 crore in Varanasi. These included the widening and strengthening of key roads, construction of railway overbridges, and improvements to both rural and urban transportation corridors — part of ongoing efforts to modernize the constituency he has represented since 2014.


India.com
28 minutes ago
- India.com
Meet The AI Expert Who Once Worked At Tesla And Rejected Mark Zuckerberg's Rs 83,00,00,00,000 Meta Offer; She Is Not from India — Know Her Net Worth
photoDetails english 2940366 AI Expert Mira Murati's Success Story: At first glance, her name might spark curiosity — it sounds like she could be from India. But Mira Murati, the former Chief Technology Officer of OpenAI and founder of the new AI startup Thinking Machines Lab, has roots in a very different part of the world. She was born in the coastal city of Vlore, Albania. While her name may sound familiar to some, her story is uniquely her own. Murati is not just another tech mind in Silicon Valley. She is a powerful force shaping the future of artificial intelligence. From a curious student in Albania to a bold leader at OpenAI, her journey has been nothing short of extraordinary. With a sharp intellect and relentless drive, she helped build groundbreaking tools like ChatGPT, DALL-E, and Codex. And if that was not enough, she made global headlines by turning down a billion dollars offer from Meta, choosing integrity and vision over valuation.

Mint
28 minutes ago
- Mint
Who is Andrew Tulloch? Mira Murati's co-founder who rejected a $1.5 billion payday from Mark Zuckerberg
Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg tried to buy former OpenAI CTO Mira Murati's AI startup Thinking Machines Lab a few months ago. However, when Murati refused, Meta responded by launching a full-scale recruitment drive targeting the startup and approached more than a dozen out of her 50 employees, according to a report by Wall Street Journal. However, the chief target for Zuckerberg and Alexandr Wang, Meta's newly appointed head of Superintelligence Labs, was Murati's co-founder Andrew Tulloch. Reportedly, Zuckerberg and Wang peppered Tulloch with messages asking him to join and offered a $1 billion pay package. Tulloch could have made as much as $1.5 billion, including top bonuses and stock performance, over a period of six years. However, not only did Tulloch say no, none of Thinking Machines Lab's employees left either. Originally from Australia, Tulloch is a co-founder at Thinking Machines Lab. While not much is known about the startup, Murati has raised over $2 billion from investors. The company's stated mission is to make 'AI systems more widely understood, customizable and generally capable.'. Murati has said that the startup will share its first product in the 'next couple months'. It has reportedly leased an office in a quieter part of San Francisco's Mission District, a couple of blocks from OpenAI. Tulloch graduated from the University of Sydney and had the highest GPA among science students. After that, he worked on machine learning at Facebook for 18 months before starting graduate school at Cambridge. He eventually went on to work at Facebook's AI Research Group and became a distinguished engineer. OpenAI President Greg Brockman tried to hire him in 2016 as one of the company's first employees, but he was worried about taking a large pay cut from his $800,000 job at Facebook and decided not to join the startup. OpenAI was paying its new recruits an annual salary of $175,000 and a $125,000 annual bonus. Tulloch did go on to join OpenAI in 2023 after ChatGPT had already become a viral sensation. As per a report by Wired, Mira Murati's AI startup Thinking Machines Lab was offered $1 billion by Mark Zuckerberg's Meta to join its AI Superintelligence team. 'So far at Thinking Machines Lab, not a single person has taken the offer,' Murati was quoted as saying by the outlet. According to the report, Mira Murati's team members were offered packages that ranged between $200,000 to $1 billion, every single one of which was rejected as employees refused to join the Meta Superintelligence Lab. Notably, Zuckerberg has been trying to revive Meta's AI efforts in recent months after the company's Llama 4 models failed to gain widespread recognition compared to rival models from OpenAI, Google and Anthropic. The Meta CEO has set up a new Superintelligence Labs unit in the company to aim for 'superintilligence' — the cognitive performance of the brightest and most gifted human beings. Meta has also acquired a 49 percent stake in AI startup Scale AI for $14.8 billion and AI-generated human voices startup Play AI. The company has also tried to poach hundreds of OpenAI researchers and brought at least 10 of them onboard along with many others from Apple, Google and Anthropic.