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Google Forms is the drab frock of survey tools. It’s functional, but since its 2008 launch, its features and design have stagnated. Tally is a terrific new form creation tool that lets you create questions as easily as you’d create a Google Doc. Read on for survey ideas and free templates as well as limitatio
![Why ChatGPT’s search answers are no substitute for links](https://www.cdn5.niftycent.com/d/D/m/o/Y/Z/y/why-chatgpt-s-search-answers-are-no-substitute-for-links.webp)
Full disclosure: As a writer of stories that are highly dependent on search traffic, I’m naturally biased about the value of links in search results.
But as someone who also conducts a lot of web searches, I’m also convinced that the new wave of generative AI search engines—most notably Microsoft’s ChatGPT-infused version of Bing—are missing the point. Instead of fixating on direct answers to users’ questions, they should be using their natu
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Clarkesworld Magazine is no stranger to tales of artificial intelligence impacting society, but in a sad and wild case of life imitating art, the Hugo Award-winning magazine has had to temporarily close its doors to submissions due to it being bombarded with people filing science fiction stories ostensibly written by ChatGPT.
Clarkesworld Magazine editor Neil Clarke made the announcement on Twitter yesterday with the simple statement, “Submissions are currently closed. It sho
![Will Congress miss its chance to regulate generative AI early?](https://www.cdn5.niftycent.com/d/D/P/y/N/z/b/will-congress-miss-its-chance-to-regulate-generative-ai-early.webp)
As lawmakers work to understand generative AI, some of the more tech-focused among them fear a repeat of Congress’s flat-footed response to the last big tech wave, social media.
Beginning in the Bush years and continuing through the Obama administration, tech companies kept Washington largely at bay with promises to “self-regulate” on key issues such as privacy protection, child safety, disinformation, and data portability.
Many in Washington now belie
![Lime reports its first fully profitable year on an adjusted basis](https://www.cdn5.niftycent.com/d/k/z/5/A/6/W/lime-reports-its-first-fully-profitable-year-on-an-adjusted-basis.webp)
Micromobility startup Lime announced Tuesday that it was profitable throughout 2022 on an adjusted EBITDA basis—making it the first micromobility company to post a full profitable year, it said.
The company said it achieved a record $466 million in gross bookings last year, which is a 33% jump from 2021. It also posted adjusted EBITDA of $15 million. EBITDA stands for earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization, and can be used to measure a company’
![Restaurant subscriptions: Panera Bread, P.F. Chang’s, and others get in on a growing trend](https://www.cdn5.niftycent.com/d/k/l/X/K/A/K/restaurant-subscriptions-panera-bread-p-f-chang-s-and-others-get-in-on-a-growing-trend.webp)
Consumers are willing to pay monthly subscription fees for streaming services, pet food, and even toilet paper. And now some restaurants are betting they’ll do the same for their favorite meals.
Large chains like Panera and P.F. Chang’s as well as neighborhood hangouts are increasingly experimenting with the subscription model as a way to ensure steady revenue and customer visits. Some offer unlimited drinks or free delivery for a monthly fee; others will bring out you
![Why it’s unlikely the Supreme Court decides to shake up Section 230](https://www.cdn5.niftycent.com/d/D/2/3/P/r/V/why-it-s-unlikely-the-supreme-court-decides-to-shake-up-section-230.webp)
The Supreme Court heard two and a half hours of often confusing, and at times frustrating, arguments on Tuesday in a case that could determine whether platforms are protected from liability for their recommendation tools. In Gonzalez v. Google, the court is considering whether Section 230 ought to protect tech platforms that recommend harmful user content. Part of the problem, it was plain to see, was that Section 230 simply wasn’t written to answer this sort of dilemma: The law is 30
![Twitter’s transparency reporting has tanked under Elon Musk](https://www.cdn5.niftycent.com/d/1/9/g/j/X/z/twitter-s-transparency-reporting-has-tanked-under-elon-musk.webp)
Twitter has quietly gone silent about how it enforces its rules and responds to government demands about its users.
The company has not posted a transparency report since Elon Musk’s purchase of it in October, ending a 10-year streak of keeping the world apprised of governmental user information requests.
Had Twitter stuck to its usual twice-yearly cadence, we would have seen a new transparency report posted at the end of January documenting the first half of 2022&#
![This ChatGPT feature has huge potential—but really needs work](https://www.cdn5.niftycent.com/d/e/a/X/m/7/5/this-chatgpt-feature-has-huge-potential-but-really-needs-work.webp)
It started with a simple question: “What can you do?”
I’ve been playing around with ChatGPT for a while now and I find it to be almost magical in its ability to cobble together code on the fly, a great tool for generating ideas, and a powerful text generator—as long as you’re not too hung up on factual accuracy.
But when I asked OpenAI’s chatbot to list its capabilities for me, one thing in its answer stuck out more than any other: summa
![Deepfakes are getting smarter thanks to GPT, sparking funding and fears](https://www.cdn5.niftycent.com/d/e/b/w/V/b/8/deepfakes-are-getting-smarter-thanks-to-gpt-sparking-funding-and-fears.webp)
In the old days, if you wanted to create convincing dialogue for a deepfake video, you had to actually write the words yourself. These days, it’s easier than ever to let the AI do it all for you.
“You basically now just need to have an idea for content,” says Natalie Monbiot, head of strategy at Hour One, a Tel Aviv-based startup that brings deepfake technology to online learning videos, business presentations, news reports and ads. Last month the company added