💡 The next BIG leap for ChatGPT and AI

Plus: 😱 Amazon Executives "okay" with Dark Patterns, 🎭 Double Tap, Double Life

💡 Dall-E 3 Sets a New Standard in AI Image Creation

OpenAI has just unveiled Dall-E 3, an AI image generation model that works with ChatGPT to produce images. Here’s why it’s a game-changer:

  1. Better output: Dall-E 3 understands prompts more deeply and produces higher-detail images. Early users on Twitter seem to agree.

  2. Prompt generation: Unlike other AI apps, Dall-E 3 is built on ChatGPT. Just tell ChatGPT what you want to see, and it’ll do the rest.

  3. Text in image: Dall-E 3 can produce accurate text in images, perfect for creating brand logos or graphic ads.

  4. Usage rights: Images created with Dall-E are free to use for commercial purposes without any legal hassles.

Dall-E 3 will be rolled out to ChatGPT Plus and Enterprise users in a few weeks. OpenAI said that it will also allow artists to opt their art out of future versions of text-to-image AI models.

Here’s a video that shows how Dall-E 3 in ChatGPT works:

🎭 Facebook Introducing Multiple Profiles

Facebook, has finally decided to let users have multiple personal profiles.

It’s like they suddenly realized that people might want to keep their cat memes separate from their professional updates.

So now, you can have a profile for your book club, another for your close friends, and yet another for your secret love of knitting. Each profile will have its own feed and you can switch between them without logging in.

However, some features like dating and marketplace won’t be available for additional profiles initially.

🕵️‍♂️ Amazon Executives Allegedly Approve Sneaky Sign-ups for Amazon Prime

Amazon executives were allegedly “okay” with customers being secretly signed up for Amazon Prime.

The FTC added new details to back up its claims to the original lawsuit, filed in June, including internal messages of three senior Amazon leaders, including Neil Lindsay, who allegedly “played a key role” in the scheme.

Amazon designers once asked Lindsay about the company’s use of dark patterns — elements of Amazon’s user interface that allegedly aim to trick customers into subscribing to Prime.

Lindsay, the lawsuit claims, said that Amazon was “okay” with their use. His explanation was that “once consumers become Prime members — even unknowingly — they will see what a great program it is and remain members.”

Once customers were signed up, the FTC argues, Amazon also created an intentionally complicated cancellation process. The process was codenamed “Iliad,” referring to Homer’s ancient epic poem.

Amazon is one of many companies the FTC has gone after in recent years in its efforts to fight the use of dark patterns.

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