Artificial
intelligence
is
running
rampant
across
Google’s
entire
product
portfolio,
and
YouTube
is
adopting
some
of
the
company’s
newest
tech
in
service
of
helping
creators
create.
On
Wednesday,
at
its
Made
on
YouTube
event
in
New
York
City,
the
company
announced
a
series
of
AI-related
features
on
the
platform,
including
a
couple
that
might
change
how
creators
make
videos
—
and
the
videos
they
make.
The
first
feature
is
the
new
Inspiration
tab
in
the
YouTube
Studio
app,
which
YouTube
has
been
testing
in
a
limited
way
over
the
last
few
months.
The
tab’s
job
is,
essentially,
to
tell
you
what
to
make:
the
AI-powered
tool
will
suggest
a
concept
for
a
video,
provide
a
title
and
a
thumbnail,
and
even
write
an
outline
and
the
first
few
lines
of
the
video
for
you.
YouTube
frames
it
as
a
helpful
brainstorming
tool
but
also
acknowledges
that
you
can
use
it
to
build
out
entire
projects.
And
I’m
just
guessing
here,
but
I’d
bet
those
AI-created
ideas
are
going
to
be
pretty
darn
good
at
gaming
the
YouTube
algorithm.
Once
you
have
some
AI
inspiration,
you
can
make
some
AI
videos
with
Veo,
the
superpowerful
DeepMind
video
model
that
is
now
being
integrated
into
YouTube
Shorts.
Veo
is
mostly
going
to
be
part
of
the
“Dream
Screen”
feature
YouTube
has
been
working
on,
which
is
an
extension
of
the
green
screen
concept
but
with
AI-generated
backgrounds
of
all
sorts.
You’ll
also
be
able
to
make
full
Veo
videos,
too,
but
only
with
clips
up
to
six
seconds
long.
(After
a
few
seconds,
AI
video
tends
to
get...
really
weird.)
Veo
is
integrated
right
into
the
normal
Shorts
editor,
“just
like
it’s
footage
from
my
camera
roll,”
says
Sarah
Ali,
a
director
of
product
management
at
YouTube.
But
she
emphasizes
that
it’s
still
dependent
on
the
creator’s
vision
to
pull
it
all
together.
The
clips
will
also
be
watermarked
with
DeepMind’s
SynthID
tool,
plus
a
visual
indication
that
it’s
generated
by
AI.
Both
of
these
features
are
rolling
out
slowly,
and
should
appear
to
creators
late
this
year
or
early
next.
There
are
other
AI
features
coming
to
YouTube,
too.
The
platform’s
auto-dubbing
feature,
which
converts
videos
to
multiple
languages,
is
coming
to
more
creators
and
languages.
It’s
also
giving
creators
AI
tools
with
which
to
interact
with
fans
through
the
new
Communities
section
of
the
app.
There
are
some
exciting
possibilities
for
what
could
happen
when
creators
have
an
easier
time
making
new
things,
but
it’s
also
possible
that
YouTube
is
about
to
be
flooded
with
AI-conceived,
AI-written,
and
even
AI-produced
videos
that
all
look
and
sound
and
feel
kind
of
the
same.
Most
of
these
new
features
can
be
useful
tools
or
shortcuts
to
slop
creation,
and
each
creator
will
have
to
decide
what
they
want
them
to
be.
But
from
YouTube’s
perspective,
the
company
has
spent
the
last
few
years
trying
to
lower
the
bar
to
becoming
a
YouTube
creator,
particularly
through
Shorts,
as
it
tries
to
compete
with
TikTok
and
Instagram
and
the
countless
other
places
people
make
things
now.
It
seems
confident
that
AI
can
make
practically
every
part
of
a
creator’s
job
easier
—
and
maybe
get
them
to
create
even
more.
(Originally posted by David Pierce)
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