Los Angeles Times

Election deepfakes and high-profile bankruptcies: Here's what AI will bring in 2024

If 2023 was the year that AI finally broke into the mainstream, 2024 could be the year it gets fully enmeshed in our lives — or the year the bubble bursts. But whatever happens, the stage is set for another whirlwind 12 months, coming in the wake of Hollywood's labor backlash against automation; the rise of consumer chatbots, including OpenAI's GPT-4 and Elon Musk's Grok; a half-baked coup ...
One thing both skeptics and enthusiasts alike can agree on: Artificial intelligence will have a banner year in 2024.

If 2023 was the year that AI finally broke into the mainstream, 2024 could be the year it gets fully enmeshed in our lives — or the year the bubble bursts.

But whatever happens, the stage is set for another whirlwind 12 months, coming in the wake of Hollywood's labor backlash against automation; the rise of consumer chatbots, including OpenAI's GPT-4 and Elon Musk's Grok; a half-baked coup against Sam Altman; early inklings of a regulatory crackdown; and, of course, that viral deepfake of Pope Francis in a puffer jacket.

To gauge what we should expect in the new year, The Times asked a slate of experts and stakeholders to send in their 2024 artificial

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times6 min read
LA Unified School District Parents And Teachers In Uproar Over Timed Academic Testing For 4-year-olds
LOS ANGELES — This month in her transitional kindergarten class at L.A. Unified, student Maria Arriaga will be timed to see how many uppercase and lowercase letters she can name in a minute. She'll be tested to see if she can sound out nonsense words
Los Angeles Times10 min read
At 'LA Progressive Shooters,' A Gun Space For People Sick Of American Gun Culture
At least two hours have gone by in the Pistol 101 class, and no student has fired a bullet or even picked up a gun. This isn't a lesson for anyone eager to pull the trigger. Tom Nguyen's teaching style is patient, aimed at demystifying an object many
Los Angeles Times2 min read
Deadly Overdoses Fell In US For First Time In Five Years, New Estimates Show
Deaths from drug overdoses fell last year in the United States as fewer people lost their lives to fentanyl and other opioids, marking the first time the death toll had dropped in five years, according to newly released estimates from the Centers for

Related Books & Audiobooks