Stay on top of tech: five ways to take back control, from emails to AI

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Stay on top of tech: five ways to take back control, from emails to AI
Author: Victoria Turk
Published: Jan, 13 2025 08:00

Is tech calling the shots in your life? From making AI work smarter to tracking stolen phones, our expert explains how to get ahead. Asking ChatGPT to write your emails is so two years ago. Generative AI tools are now going beyond the basic text-prompt phase. Take Google’s NotebookLM, an experimental “AI research assistant” that lets you upload not just text but also videos, links and PDFs. It will provide a summary of the content, answer questions about it, and even make a podcast-like “AI overview” if you want it to – all while organising your original sources and notes. As AI tools advance, expect more features like this to be baked into everyday software. All the usual caveats of using AI apply: the responsibility for factchecking lies with you.

If you’re stuck in a feedback loop of samey music or TV recommendations, go for a refresh. Some platforms, such as Netflix, let you delete your viewing history, which will help clear the slate (select “hide all” under “viewing activity” for a do-over). Spotify is harder to crack: you’ll need to train it into offering a broader selection by diversifying your listening. Choose playlists that focus specifically on new music, or go old school and ask friends for their tips. Use the “private session” mode or select “exclude from your taste profile” to keep your guilty pleasures (or your kids’ nursery rhymes) from infecting future recommendations.

Manipulated videos, or “deepfakes”, might already be old hat, but you can expect to see more entirely AI-generated videos as text-to-video tools enter the mainstream. OpenAI’s Sora and Meta’s Movie Gen are continuing to be developed, with impressive (or concerning, depending on your stance) results. Look for watermarks that show a video is AI-generated, and watch out for telltale mistakes, such as errors in anatomy or weird physics. Most importantly, use context clues: if something seems particularly shocking, unlikely, or out of place, be on guard.

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