Terrified, that they would come back . Absolutely, the chilling matter, a young survivor driven to become a state senator. He was very, very passionate. What they ever come Out Of The Dark . I always get a little emotional and i cant believe its in here 30 years later, an answer. The Power Forgiveness. This is what my dad and my mom taught me. In his 40s and married again, he started fresh, here in the beach, in malibu. It was time, finally to put it to rest. Ali use hollywood to release those demons, get that in the rearview mirror. I look back and it was just building this coat of armor. And that was killing me and it was killing my marriages, my friendships. It was protecting me but it was keeping me away from people that i loved. After all, what else but a movie could make sense of it . But those people did to him. And then what came of it . You couldnt make up. And the movie, it turned out to be a decadeslong saga of crime and punishment retribution and forgiveness. Perhaps it was
tour harm people by having false information about them. since it launched there s been a lot of noise about openai. it gives humanlike responses to basic queries and will dramatically change the way we get information online. it s already the subject of fierce debate, including the accuracy of some responses and whether the company violated authors rights when it was a train in the technology. this spring, converse congress hosted sam altman and he called for regulation to be draughted for the emerging industry. now.. speaking of regulators. . not everyone believes they will have the ability to keep artificial intelligence in check. that s sir martin sorrell s case. the man who s built the world s biggest advertising company has been speaking to the bbc s aaron heslehurst.. and he s also said advertising companies need to self regulate on the ethics of using the technology. we ve already taken a position that, for example, we won t alter pictures. let s say we had a white ac
if the ai tool harmed people by generating false information about them. since its launch, there has been a lot of noise about openai. this is the service that generates convincing humanlike responses to user queries and is expected to dramatically change the way we get information online. it is already the subject of fierce debate, including over the accuracy of some of its responses and whether the company violated author s rights when it was training the technology. this spring, congress hosted the chief executive sam oldman for a hearing in which he called for regulation to be crafted for the emerging industry. not everyone believes they will have the ability to keep artificial intelligence in check. the man who built the biggest advertising company has been speaking to the bbc and said advertising companies need to self regulate on the ethics of using the technology. we have already taken a position that, example, we won t alter pictures. let s say we had a white actor,
regulators turned their attention to synonymous with the has become synonymous with the revolution. plus, we take a deep dive into the business environment in deep dive into the business environn politicaliailand,, ,, deep dive into the business environn political transition fractious political transition plays out. hey there, welcome to the asia business report. with me, hey there, welcome to the asia busine oi. eport. with me, hey there, welcome to the asia busine oi. we rt. with me, hey there, welcome to the asia busine oi. we begin h me, hey there, welcome to the asia busine oi. we begin in ne, hey there, welcome to the asia busine oi. we begin in the us mariko oi. we begin in the us regulators are taking aim at one of the most renowned names in the artificial intelligence base. chatgpt. the federal trade commission has opened an investigation, saying it is looking into whether the popular chat but hind consumers by publishing false information. the ceo of openai, the com
my guest today is kenneth roth, just retired after 30 years leading the campaign group human rights watch. he s been banned in a host of countries. is it time to acknowledge his brand of human rights campaigning isn t working? kenneth roth in cambridge, massachusetts. welcome to hardtalk. great to be back, stephen. it s good to be with you. it s good to have you on the show. it is indeed quite something, leading one of the world s highest profile human rights advocacy groups for some three decades. did you leave thatjob with a sense of defeat? no, not at all. infact, i mean, maybe i should start with your introduction, because, you know, your introduction was the common wisdom. you know, that democracy is in decline, that autocracy is ascendant. in fact, i think it s a bit more complicated than that. i mean, we are seeing the rise of autocratic voices, you know, the trumps of the world, in western democracies. but if you look at the leading autocratic countries and you put yo