• The Role of Anime in Promoting Japanese Tourism
    gamerant.com
    Anime translates to pretty much any speaking language, and, thanks to insane art styles and a series of amazing stories, anime has become a rather unique way for people all over the world to experience Japanese culture. Anime samples what is rich and unique in Japanese culture and landscape through its narratives to bring Japanese culture, landscape, and values to viewers. Yes, we are introduced to traditional customs and aesthetics from iconic series such as Spirited Away and My Neighbor Totoro, and its so incredibly interesting that we become obsessed with visiting Japan.
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  • Accidental Win - Unluckiest Zombie!
    gamerant.com
    Players score an array of triple eliminations and more accidental wins.
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  • Best Christmas Moments In Harry Potter
    gamerant.com
    Buckle up! Blankets, hot chocolate, and a little bit of mischief, Christmas is coming! Nothing feels more Christmas-y than re-watching the entire Harry Potter saga. Although not necessarily a saga about Christmas, it has become a staple in so many households to watch the golden trio's attempt at defeating the Dark Lord when the weather gets chilly.
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  • Introducing My Game! [Devlog #1 - 12/24]
    gamedev.net
    The production for my game, Cellar Worlds, has officially begun, and this first DevLog will share details about the game in the making.Cellar Worlds is an Action/Adventure RPG inspired by the 3DS game Ever Oasis.In a small town in the middle of nowhere, a dark force transformed everyones cellars into a doorway to other worlds. Monsters from the world infested the town and drove people from their homes. You, being stubborn and not wanting to leave your dear home, fight b
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  • TikTok is full of bogus, potentially dangerous medical advice
    www.fastcompany.com
    TikTok is the new doctors office, quickly becoming a go-to platform for medical advice.Unfortunately, much of that advice is sketchy at best.A new report by the healthcare software firm Tebra found 45% of medical advice on TikTok to be false or misleading. Some categories were worse offenders than others: TikTok videos about alternative medicine have the most inaccuracies, with 67% of posts flagged as misleading. (See: putting onions in your socks to cure a cold, or sticking garlic cloves up your nose for a sinus infection.) Womens health and general health topics werent much better, with 54% of advice in each category being inaccurate.Mental health content on TikTok had the lowest misinformation rate at 31%. Wellness and self-care videos were slightly worse at 37%, while advice about chronic illness was false or misleading 39% of the time. More views also doesnt equate to more reliable informationvideos with more than 5 million views were found to be 14% more likely to spread false information than those with fewer than 1 million views.Among the misleading claims on TikTok, the three most common include quick-fix weight-loss tricks, misinformation around vaccines long-term effects on fertility, and cure-all daily supplements. While some creators use scare tactics to discourage actions like wearing masks, getting vaccinated, or using birth control, others, posing as medical experts, cash in by promoting diets, supplements, and treatments that are ineffective at best, and harmful at worst.With 17% of Americans trusting TikTok as much as they do doctors, and 7% trusting the platform even more than they do medical professionals, the consequences are potentially serious. Given that nearly half of U.S. TikTok users are under 30, the app becomes a perfect storm for misleading advice targeting a young and impressionable audience. Theres also no easy way to verify whether these so-called experts have the credentials they claim, leaving users to rely on unvetted information.Consumers who blindly follow unverified health advice online are setting themselves up for trouble. The best advice? Trust your instincts. If a health claim sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
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  • This Custom Tiny Home Is Like A Luxurious Mansion On Wheels
    www.yankodesign.com
    Modern Tiny Living designed a custom tiny home called Serenity. The tiny house features an extremely clever layout that deserves to be appreciated. The tiny home maker essentially created a mansion on wheels, taking micro-home living to a whole new level. It serves as a comfortable dwelling, and a dream home for the owner, who wanted to have outdoor adventures and a home office. Serenity merges a cozy accommodation with a private home office and an outdoor shower so it is a unique and well-equipped home. It offers the perks of tiny homes on wheels, as well as the comfort of a full-time premium residence.Design: Modern Tiny LivingThe house features a generous size of 28 feet, although it isnt exactly a super tiny home, it isnt an extremely large one either. It is a customized and modified version of MLTs original Point model, but with an extra eight feet, making it a spacious space indeed. It features an additional storage unit at the end, which makes it look even longer, while an arched front section supports a custom-designed elevated social area. The home is equipped with only one loft bedroom, which holds a king-sized bed and includes multiple large windows. You can access the bedroom through a sturdy staircase with extra-wide treads and a full-size handrail. The room also includes a safety railing which is an extension of the handrail.The bedroom also includes a tiny door that leads to a small corridor placed above the home office. So, the bedroom and the home office are connected which is quite unusual and fascinating. The home office is equipped with a concrete desk and plenty of storage including built-in shelves. It can be accessed from the outside as well, so one can enter the office from inside and outside. The opposite side of the house accommodates an elevated social area which serves as a seating area, a guest bed, and a storage solution. This feature is quite unique, and also includes a row of windows for some surreal views.This social section can accommodate a large group of people, and it also includes spacious drawers all around. There is some sub-floor storage in the middle as well. A built-in bookcase is also another storage section. The sofa can be converted into a guest bed if needed. The kitchen is quite spacious and is equipped with a premium concrete countertop that also doubles up as a modern snack bar. It has plenty of storage, in the form of cabinets, drawers and overhead cupboards. There is also space for full-size appliances. This mansion on wheels was priced at around $105,000 five years ago, and it showcases how clever customization can turn an ordinary tiny home into a luxurious abode.The post This Custom Tiny Home Is Like A Luxurious Mansion On Wheels first appeared on Yanko Design.
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  • Maximum Entertainment divests Merge Games assets to Silver Lining
    venturebeat.com
    Maximum Entertainment announced it's divested assets of the former Merge Games to new publisher Silver Lining Interactive.Read More
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  • This AI Paper by The Data Provenance Initiative Team Highlights Challenges in Multimodal Dataset Provenance, Licensing, Representation, and Transparency for Responsible Development
    www.marktechpost.com
    The advancement of artificial intelligence hinges on the availability and quality of training data, particularly as multimodal foundation models grow in prominence. These models rely on diverse datasets spanning text, speech, and video to enable language processing, speech recognition, and video content generation tasks. However, the lack of transparency regarding dataset origins and attributes creates significant barriers. Using training data that is geographically and linguistically skewed, inconsistently licensed, or poorly documented introduces ethical, legal, and technical challenges. Understanding the gaps in data provenance is essential for advancing responsible and inclusive AI technologies.AI systems face a critical issue in dataset representation and traceability, which limits the development of unbiased and legally sound technologies. Current datasets often rely heavily on a few web-based or synthetically generated sources. These include platforms like YouTube, which accounts for a significant share of speech and video datasets, and Wikipedia, which dominates text data. This dependency results in datasets failing to represent underrepresented languages and regions adequately. In addition, the unclear licensing practices of many datasets create legal ambiguities, as more than 80% of widely used datasets carry some form of undocumented or implicit restrictions despite only 33% being explicitly licensed for non-commercial use.Attempts to address these challenges have traditionally focused on narrow aspects of data curation, such as removing harmful content or mitigating bias in text datasets. However, such efforts are typically limited to single modalities and lack a comprehensive framework to evaluate datasets across modalities like speech and video. Platforms hosting these datasets, such as HuggingFace or OpenSLR, often lack the mechanisms to ensure metadata accuracy or enforce consistent documentation practices. This fragmented approach underscores the urgent need for a systematic audit of multimodal datasets that holistically considers their sourcing, licensing, and representation.To close this gap, researchers from the Data Provenance Initiative conducted the largest longitudinal audit of multimodal datasets, examining nearly 4,000 public datasets created between 1990 and 2024. The audit spanned 659 organizations from 67 countries, covering 608 languages and nearly 1.9 million hours of speech and video data. This extensive analysis revealed that web-crawled and social media platforms now account for most training data, with synthetic sources also rapidly growing. The study highlighted that while only 25% of text datasets have explicitly restrictive licenses, nearly all content sourced from platforms like YouTube or OpenAI carries implicit non-commercial constraints, raising questions about legal compliance and ethical use.The researchers applied a meticulous methodology to annotate datasets, tracing their lineage back to sources. This process uncovered significant inconsistencies in how data is licensed and documented. For instance, while 96% of text datasets include commercial licenses, over 80% of their source materials impose restrictions that are not carried forward in the datasets documentation. Similarly, video datasets highly depended on proprietary or restricted platforms, with 71% of video data originating from YouTube alone. Such findings underscore the challenges practitioners face in accessing data responsibly, particularly when datasets are repackaged or re-licensed without preserving their original terms.Notable findings from the audit include the dominance of web-sourced data, particularly for speech and video. YouTube emerged as the most significant source, contributing nearly 1 million hours to each speech and video content, surpassing other sources like audiobooks or movies. Synthetic datasets, while still a smaller portion of overall data, have grown rapidly, with models like GPT-4 contributing significantly. The audit also revealed stark geographical imbalances. North American and European organizations accounted for 93% of text data, 61% of speech data, and 60% of video data. In comparison, regions like Africa and South America collectively represented less than 0.2% across all modalities.Geographical and linguistic representation remains a persistent challenge despite nominal increases in diversity. Over the past decade, the number of languages represented in training datasets has grown to over 600, yet measures of equality in representation have shown no significant improvement. The Gini coefficient, which measures inequality, remains above 0.7 for geographical distribution and above 0.8 for language representation in text datasets, highlighting the disproportionate concentration of contributions from Western countries. For speech datasets, while representation from Asian countries like China and India has improved, African and South American organizations continue to lag far behind.The research provides several critical takeaways, offering valuable insights for developers and policymakers:Over 70% of speech and video datasets are derived from web platforms like YouTube, while synthetic sources are becoming increasingly popular, accounting for nearly 10% of all text data tokens.While only 33% of datasets are explicitly non-commercial, over 80% of source content is restricted. This mismatch complicates legal compliance and ethical use.North American and European organizations dominate dataset creation, with African and South American contributions at less than 0.2%. Linguistic diversity has grown nominally but remains concentrated in many dominant languages.GPT-4, ChatGPT, and other models have significantly contributed to the rise of synthetic datasets, which now represent a growing share of training data, particularly for creative and generative tasks.The lack of transparency and persistent Western-centric biases call for more rigorous audits and equitable practices in dataset curation.In conclusion, this comprehensive audit sheds light on the growing reliance on web-crawled and synthetic data, the persistent inequalities in representation, and the complexities of licensing in multimodal datasets. By identifying these challenges, the researchers provide a roadmap for creating more transparent, equitable, and responsible AI systems. Their work underscores the need for continued vigilance and measures to ensure that AI serves diverse communities fairly and effectively. This study is a call to action for practitioners, policymakers, and researchers to address the structural inequities in the AI data ecosystem and prioritize transparency in data provenance.Check out the Paper. All credit for this research goes to the researchers of this project. Also,dont forget to follow us onTwitter and join ourTelegram Channel andLinkedIn Group. Dont Forget to join our60k+ ML SubReddit. Sana Hassan+ postsSana Hassan, a consulting intern at Marktechpost and dual-degree student at IIT Madras, is passionate about applying technology and AI to address real-world challenges. With a keen interest in solving practical problems, he brings a fresh perspective to the intersection of AI and real-life solutions. [Download] Evaluation of Large Language Model Vulnerabilities Report (Promoted)
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  • AI in Medical Imaging: A Life-Saving Revolution or Ethical Minefield?
    towardsai.net
    AI in Medical Imaging: A Life-Saving Revolution or Ethical Minefield? 0 like December 24, 2024Share this postLast Updated on December 24, 2024 by Editorial TeamAuthor(s): Mukundan Sankar Originally published on Towards AI. This member-only story is on us. Upgrade to access all of Medium.Photo by Accuray on UnsplashArtificial intelligence (AI) is shaking up all aspects of how we do anything, including the very core of medical imaging. Visualize a machine that analyzes a CT scan and spots early signs of cancer. Before even the most skilled human eye can. Sounds impossible, doesnt it?But behind the glossy headlines and the marvels of technology lies a darker, messier reality. We need to talk about this now!Because whats the cost of these radical shifts that AI brings? And Im not just talking dollars here. Im talking about the ethics of AI in medical imagery, where lives are literally on the line. Let me break it down because this isnt just an issue for tech nerds and medical professionals. This is about all of us, and its happening right now.AIs impact can be felt in every field, including medical imaging. AI revolutionizes this field in ways we couldnt have imagined a decade ago. Machines now accurately read and analyze X-rays, MRIs, and CT scans. For example, a recent UCLA study reported that AI detected prostate cancer with an 84% accuracy rate, while human doctors achieved 67%. Read the full blog for free on Medium.Join thousands of data leaders on the AI newsletter. Join over 80,000 subscribers and keep up to date with the latest developments in AI. From research to projects and ideas. If you are building an AI startup, an AI-related product, or a service, we invite you to consider becoming asponsor. Published via Towards AITowards AI - Medium Share this post
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