Close Menu
  • Home
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • NFT News
  • Metaverse
  • Defi
  • Blockchain
  • Regulations
  • Trading

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Bitcoin Price Could Be Gearing Up For Parabolic Rally — Analyst Explains Why

May 10, 2025

Goldman Sachs Ups Stake 28% To $1.4 Billion

May 10, 2025

Still Holding TRUMP Coin? This Analyst Says Recovery To $79 Is Coming

May 10, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
CredBit.com
  • Home
  • Crypto News
    • Bitcoin
    • NFT News
  • Metaverse
  • Defi
  • Blockchain
  • Regulations
  • Trading
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
CredBit.com
Home » Metaverse classes are in session
Metaverse

Metaverse classes are in session

December 7, 20236 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit VKontakte
Metaverse classes are in session
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email

DFD author Derek Robertson meets with Meta President of Global Affairs Nick Clegg in a virtual meeting space. | Meta

A comprehensive metaverse might be a long way off, but the industry’s biggest player is trying to plant its flag in the American education industry right now.

This week I got a peek into one of Meta’s signature virtual-reality projects: a round of partnerships with college educators who have been using Meta’s technologies in their classrooms. I joined them for a virtual roundtable using the Meta Quest 3 headset, and then spoke to Meta’s president of global affairs Nick Clegg about how it’s all shaking out.

“The absorption of information by students and the way the students embraced this platform was unbelievable,” said Sherman Tippin, an attorney and adjunct professor teaching “Law in the Metaverse” at William & Mary College of Law.

He was among professors from 11 colleges including his own, Carnegie Mellon University, and Utah Valley College, the three of which just joined the program — and they nearly all shared his enthusiasm.

Clegg told me this excitement came organically.

“We haven’t been going around dumping Quest headsets on reluctant educators, this has been us responding increasingly to people who are at the forefront of using technology in education, and if anything I think we’ve been somewhat behind,” Clegg said.

He wrote in April that virtual reality is uniquely suited for educational purposes — allowing for both a kind of immersive social interaction that improves the learning experience, as well as access to simulations or experiences not otherwise available at a brick-and-mortar campus.

He said that VR headsets offered a specialized learning tool for schools in keeping with pedagogical best practices. “The educational systems that always seem to do best are those that have worked out how to tailor educational experiences around the individual needs of the student,” Clegg said, asserting that virtual reality devices allow for uniquely beneficial personal tailoring.

Of course, uptake for such a new technology at a large scale has revealed some institutional speed bumps as well, like time-consuming login processes that could hold up large classes of students. Clegg said that while the tech can be “relatively cumbersome to use” at the moment, he’s eager to pass along findings from the classroom experience to Meta’s engineering team.

While the metaverse classroom experience might be futuristic, there’s a present-day policy concern that could potentially interfere with Clegg’s vision for an educational metaverse: Aggressive American antitrust enforcement, as Meta and the Federal Trade Commission remain locked in an ongoing legal dogfight. I asked Clegg whether he worried at all that Meta could be painting yet another regulatory bullseye on its chest with its expansion into education tech, installing itself as a sort of default operating system for the virtual classroom.

He was skeptical of the idea, noting that some of the participants in yesterday’s meeting were using other companies’ technology to interact with its educational materials.

“It doesn’t feel to us at all that we’re somehow sweeping into virgin territory where no one else is competing,” Clegg said. He nodded to the fact that their educational apps are available through their own Meta Quest Store, but said Meta didn’t have “an entirely unopposed monopoly” in education.

A message from Connect The Future:

Unfair pole costs jeopardize efforts to connect 100% of Americans to broadband. Replaced poles deliver benefits to pole owners for decades – that’s why in Canada they share at least 50% of the investment. With similar cost-sharing, the FCC could speed deployment and make programs like BEAD more effective. Learn more.

Former OpenAI CEO Sam Altman testifies before congress.

OpenAI co-founder Sam Altman. | Francis Chung/POLITICO

The AI Policy Institute shared exclusively with DFD the results of another public poll on AI, this time on the Sam Altman fracas at OpenAI and some of the more esoteric philosophies of Silicon Valley.

The institute asked more than 1,200 Americans how much of the news about Altman they’d even heard at all — with a whopping 50 percent saying they’d heard none. That didn’t prevent them from sharing their opinions about it, however: When asked whether they think Altman’s firing and re-hiring increases or decreases the need for government regulation of AI, 59 percent said “increases” and only 28 responded “not sure.” The poll had a margin of error of 3.9 percent (crosstabs here).

AIPI also asked respondents what they think about “effective accelerationism,” a school of thought obscure even within the tech industry that believes AI capabilities should be pushed to their limit at any cost, with no restrictions, and that AI should even succeed humanity as the dominant form of life on the planet. This was not popular: Only 13 percent of respondents said they had a positive view of that idea, while 65 percent were unfavorable and 22 percent not sure.

The poll results also found widespread support for restrictions on AI-powered autonomous weapons, including a potential United Nations resolution banning lethal automated drones. AIPI additionally polled Americans on their view of whether AI companies should be held liable for various crimes committed with the help of AI, responding overwhelmingly favorably in every case.

Hear more about the AI Policy Institute and its co-founder Daniel Colson on the POLITICO Tech podcast.

A message from Connect The Future:

Metaverse classes are in session

The defense bill Congress agreed on late Wednesday contains some major rules for AI.

POLITICO’s Mohar Chatterjee reported on the National Defense Authorization Act for Pro subscribers, noting that it represents the most serious regulation Washington has yet enacted around the technology. It includes a bug bounty program for foundational AI models at the Pentagon, a competition for software that watermarks AI-generated content, and various reports and studies on agencies’ AI capabilities and knowledge gaps.

It also partially restructures the Pentagon’s AI office, establishing a Chief Digital and Artificial Intelligence Governing Council that will ensure the “responsible, coordinated and ethical” use of AI at the Pentagon.

The bill additionally nixes an environmental carveout that the semiconductor industry had pushed for as POLITICO’s Christine Mui reported for Pro subscribers — just as Washington will spend billions on microchip manufacturing via the CHIPS and Science Act.

Sperm whales have equivalents to human vowels.

We uncovered spectral properties in whales’ clicks that are recurrent across whales, independent of traditional types, and compositional.

We got clues to look into spectral properties from our AI interpretability technique CDEV.

New Window

Stay in touch with the whole team: Ben Schreckinger ([email protected]); Derek Robertson ([email protected]); Mohar Chatterjee ([email protected]); Steve Heuser ([email protected]); Nate Robson ([email protected]) and Daniella Cheslow ([email protected]).

A message from Connect The Future:

Unfair pole replacement costs jeopardize efforts to connect 100% of Americans to broadband. When pole owners don’t pay their fair share for investments in their own infrastructure, unserved families and small businesses pay the price. The FCC has the opportunity to fix the pole replacement cost issue and expedite broadband expansion programs like BEAD. Learn More.


Credit: Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Reddit VKontakte Telegram WhatsApp

Related Posts

Smart Cities World – Digital twins

July 30, 2024

Metaverse Virtual Real Estate Market In-depth Analysis, Rising

July 30, 2024

Metaverse ETP Airdrop Notifications – Sign Up for Free!

July 29, 2024

Global Mofy Metaverse Limited (NASDAQ:GMM) Short Interest Update

July 27, 2024

Coach brings Spring 2024 collection to the metaverse

July 26, 2024

Emerging Trends of Metaverse Virtual Real Estate Market and ForecastChina Zhonghua Geotechnical Engineering Group Co. – Economica

July 26, 2024

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks

Bitcoin Price Could Be Gearing Up For Parabolic Rally — Analyst Explains Why

May 10, 2025

Goldman Sachs Ups Stake 28% To $1.4 Billion

May 10, 2025

Still Holding TRUMP Coin? This Analyst Says Recovery To $79 Is Coming

May 10, 2025

Bitcoin Price Prediction: At $103,688 BTC Shows Unstoppable Weekly Growth of 7.6% – Could We See a New All-Time High Before June?

May 10, 2025
© 2025 - credbit.com - All Rights Reserved!
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.