Another genre/category of music is the pop mashup [1]. It's a song that's created from snippets of existing songs blended into a single, cohesive track. Sort of a like a super-condensed 3-minute DJ mix that comprised of up to dozens of song snippets.
Initial thoughts on feasibility include AI not being able to reproduce pop songs verbatim due to copyright. To create a mashup in the style that we know today, it has to be the original song, and not say "a song in the likeness of Madonna".
What other hurdles would need to be overcome to make the generative-AI mashup a reality?
[1] Madeon - Pop Culture: https://redirect.invidious.io/watch?v=lTx3G6h2xyA
Do you think Rabbit R1 is priced as a loss leader? More specifically, is it possible that the low price is a strategy to attract a large user base and then monetize through the sale of user data?
Rabbit's privacy policy [1] states: > we are committed to never selling or sharing your data with any third party, under any circumstances without your formal, explicit permission.
How sustainable do you think this pricing model is and what are implications for user privacy?
[1] https://www.rabbit.tech/privacy
Like many others, my smartphone can be accessed via biometric fingerprint login to reveal sensitive data such as email.
This got me thinking about the security implications for my smartphone. I'm curious about the potential risks and how secure my data really is after such an interaction. Even if a third party has my biometric fingerprint details, can I rely on how physical access to my phone is necessary to bypass the fingerprint lock?