Here ye, here ye! We just launched our very own Shrek Generator! It's a new AI-powered engine that transforms any celebrity into a genuine, swamp-loving, onion-eating ogre 🧅.
Scroll to the bottom of this post to transform your favorite celebrities, and on the way, take a look at some famous people that I personally idolize:
1.Reba McEntire:
2.Bill Nye:
3.Dolly Parton:
4.Jack Black:
5.Lisa Rinna:
6.Idris Elba:
7.Ina Garten:
8.Ian Armitage (AKA Young Sheldon):
9.Sarah Jessica Parker:
10.Keith Urban:
11.SZA:
12.Dev Patel:
13.Tony Hawk:
14.Mindy Kaling:
15.Adam Driver:
Now, it's your turn! Use the generator below to 🪄 Shrek-ify 🪄 any celebrity you'd like and post your famous ogre to the comments below!
SPVs are generally formed by investors who have direct access to the shares of these startups and then turn around and sell a part of their allocation to external backers, often charging significant fees while retaining some profit share (known as carry). While SVPvs aren’t new – smaller investors have relied on them for years – there’s a growing trend of SPVs successfully getting shares from the biggest names in AI. Rather than giving up the shares because the early investor can’t afford them, they’ll create the SPV, fund it by raising money from others, and, in most cases, charge additional fees.
The first crewed launch of Boeing’s Starliner capsule has once again been called off, this time after an automatic hold was issued by the ground launch sequencer less than four minutes before liftoff.
The reason for shutting down the feature is simple: it failed to gain traction. Additionally, it has been Tumblr's plan since last year's reorg to put an end to things that aren't performing well. In 2022, Tumblr introduced Tips as a complementary feature to Post+, its subscription offering that allowed creators to put content behind a paywall.
This week in AI, OpenAI launched discounted plans for nonprofits and education customers and drew back the curtains on its most recent efforts to stop bad actors from abusing its AI tools. OpenAI removed one of the voices used by its AI-powered chatbot ChatGPT after users pointed out that it sounded eerily similar to Johansson's. Johansson later released a statement saying that she hired legal counsel to inquire about the voice and get exact details about how it was developed -- and that she'd refused repeated entreaties from OpenAI to license her voice for ChatGPT. Now, a piece in The Washington Post implies that OpenAI didn't in fact seek to clone Johansson's voice and that any similarities were accidental.