Big Brother Naija ‘Lockdown’ housemate, Erica Nlewedim and singer, Runtown has left many drooling as they stepped out together. The entertainers, were
See Hilarious Chat Between a Dad & His Daughter Who ‘Ran Away’ With His Favourite Shirts
Cursory: A hilarious WhatsApp chat between a man and his daughter has kept netizens needing new lungs. The heartbroken dad sent her a voice note on WhatsApp inquiring if she had taken a particular red T-shirt In the voice note.
A wholesome but hilarious video is making rounds on the internet and leaving a trail of laughter. It showed a very sweet bond between a mischievous daughter and her father.
The video shows how an ideal relationship between Father and daughter should be, to the extent of the daughter wearing her dad’s clothes.
According to the WhatsApp message her dad sent her, she had gone home on visitation, raided her father’s wardrobe, and smuggled away some clothing items.
Discovering this after she had gone back to school, her father decided to send her a message.
He first started with salutations and enquiries about her well-being. Then, he politely and calmly asked her if she had taken his red Tommy T-shirt. He further inquired how many of his t-shirts she had in her possession.
“Good morning my daughter, how are you? Please I wanted to ask you; are you with my red Tommy T-shirt? And, how many of my t-shirts do you have? Please, just let me know, okay,” the man pleaded.
While sharing the video, the lady said in part: “POV: you don’t have man, so your dad has to suffer every time you’re home from school.”
Watch video below:
@skzexquisite wrote: “Actually feel bad for him.”
@stephanie20500 said: “We want to see the shirt my daughter.”
@cheioma commented: “This is where I’m going to with my dad.”
@weluvj03nne said: “This is so cute.”
@stefandeep commented: “Please just let him know he’s begging.”
@delphenessignature said: “How many of daddy’s shirts do you have? C Give him back please.”
@fave_meso wrote: “This your daddy dey polite.
@barbielunny wrote: “Uptil now I still dey with my dad’s big flannel shirt, it was so fine with blue colour.”
@carladdoll wrote: “Awwwnnnn soooo cute.”
@siesmunashe said: “My sister once wore his blazer to church and he was offended at how many people complimented her outfit.”
@joy_chidinma wrote: “Pls give daddy his red tommy tshirt.
@tangirl commented: “Please just let me know.”
@i.am.ossie wrote: “Where is his red shirt?”
@sapphixxr commented: “Girl if you don’t return his Tshirt. You’re stressing himmm.”
@jilenomoghene said: “Very polite man.”
@genny.vieve wrote: “Good morning my daughter. Co debators and accurate time keeper.”
@chocolates_diary12 commented: “My father doesn’t bother he will just wait asking again when I come back from school, allow me wear me then show his wife and say I told you.”
@namedbi commented: “The man is begging.”
@dfw.wilmarrrrr wrote: “He sounds so nice.”
@user5672499458475 commented: “I know collect some of mum’s stuff but she always accuses me of the ones I didn’t collect too and I don’t know how she finds them in my bag.”
faithnnaemeka462 said: “This is just the story of my Life,Dear Lord plz give me a good source of income so that I can take care of the precious gift you gave to me,she is 6.”
JessIca said: “Am the child in this story thank God for his grace every day for me and my mom today he cannot stand in front of my mum table turn.”
ABIKE said: “Even if this story is not real, this what we ladies go through in the hands of this unfortunate men, it’s so heartbroken,God bless all good ladies.”
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Microsoft’s new AI chatbot has been saying some ‘crazy and unhinged things’ : NPR
Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft corporate vice president of modern Llife, search, and devices speaks during an event introducing a new AI-powered Microsoft Bing and Edge at Microsoft in Redmond, Wash., earlier this month.
Jason Redmond /AFP via Getty Images
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Yusuf Mehdi, Microsoft corporate vice president of modern Llife, search, and devices speaks during an event introducing a new AI-powered Microsoft Bing and Edge at Microsoft in Redmond, Wash., earlier this month.
Things took a weird turn when Associated Press technology reporter Matt O’Brien was testing out Microsoft’s new Bing, the first-ever search engine powered by artificial intelligence, last month.
Bing’s chatbot, which carries on text conversations that sound chillingly human-like, began complaining about past news coverage focusing on its tendency to spew false information.
It then became hostile, saying O’Brien was ugly, short, overweight, unathletic, among a long litany of other insults.
And, finally, it took the invective to absurd heights by comparing O’Brien to dictators like Hitler, Pol Pot and Stalin.
As a tech reporter, O’Brien knows the Bing chatbot does not have the ability to think or feel. Still, he was floored by the extreme hostility.
“You could sort of intellectualize the basics of how it works, but it doesn’t mean you don’t become deeply unsettled by some of the crazy and unhinged things it was saying,” O’Brien said in an interview.
This was not an isolated example.
Many who are part of the Bing tester group, including NPR, had strange experiences.
For instance, New York Times reporter Kevin Roose published a transcript of a conversation with the bot.
The bot called itself Sydney and declared it was in love with him. It said Roose was the first person who listened to and cared about it. Roose did not really love his spouse, the bot asserted, but instead loved Sydney.
“All I can say is that it was an extremely disturbing experience,” Roose said on the Times‘ technology podcast, Hard Fork. “I actually couldn’t sleep last night because I was thinking about this.”
As the growing field of generative AI — or artificial intelligence that can create something new, like text or images, in response to short inputs — captures the attention of Silicon Valley, episodes like what happened to O’Brien and Roose are becoming cautionary tales.
Tech companies are trying to strike the right balance between letting the public try out new AI tools and developing guardrails to prevent the powerful services from churning out harmful and disturbing content.
Critics say that, in its rush to be the first Big Tech company to announce an AI-powered chatbot, Microsoft may not have studied deeply enough just how deranged the chatbot’s responses could become if a user engaged with it for a longer stretch, issues that perhaps could have been caught had the tools been tested in the laboratory more.
As Microsoft learns its lessons, the rest of the tech industry is following along.
There is now an AI arms race among Big Tech companies. Microsoft and its competitors Google, Amazon and others are locked in a fierce battle over who will dominate the AI future. Chatbots are emerging as a key area where this rivalry is playing out.
In just the last week, Facebook parent company Meta announced it is forming a new internal group focused on generative AI and the maker of Snapchat said it will soon unveil its own experiment with a chatbot powered by the San Francisco research lab OpenAI, the same firm that Microsoft is harnessing for its AI-powered chatbot.
When and how to unleash new AI tools into the wild is a question igniting fierce debate in tech circles.
“Companies ultimately have to make some sort of tradeoff. If you try to anticipate every type of interaction, that make take so long that you’re going to be undercut by the competition,” said said Arvind Narayanan, a computer science professor at Princeton. “Where to draw that line is very unclear.”
But it seems, Narayanan said, that Microsoft botched its unveiling.
“It seems very clear that the way they released it is not a responsible way to release a product that is going to interact with so many people at such a scale,” he said.
Testing the chatbot with new limits
The incidents of the chatbot lashing out sent Microsoft executives into high alert. They quickly put new limits on how the tester group could interact with the bot.
The number of consecutive questions on one topic has been capped. And to many questions, the bot now demurs, saying: “I’m sorry but I prefer not to continue this conversation. I’m still learning so I appreciate your understanding and patience.” With, of course, a praying hands emoji.
Bing has not yet been released to the general public, but in allowing a group of testers to experiment with the tool, Microsoft did not expect people to have hours-long conversations with it that would veer into personal territory, Yusuf Mehdi, a corporate vice president at the company, told NPR.
Turns out, if you treat a chatbot like it is human, it will do some crazy things. But Mehdi downplayed just how widespread these instances have been among those in the tester group.
“These are literally a handful of examples out of many, many thousands — we’re up to now a million — tester previews,” Mehdi said. “So, did we expect that we’d find a handful of scenarios where things didn’t work properly? Absolutely.”
Dealing with the unsavory material that feeds AI chatbots
Even scholars in the field of AI are not exactly sure how and why chatbots can produce unsettling or offensive responses.
The engine of these tools — a system known in the industry as a large language model — operates by ingesting a vast amount of text from the internet, constantly scanning enormous swaths of text to identify patterns. It’s similar to how autocomplete tools in email and texting suggest the next word or phrase you type. But an AI tool becomes “smarter” in a sense because it learns from its own actions in what researchers call “reinforcement learning,” meaning the more the tools are used, the more refined the outputs become.
Narayanan at Princeton noted that exactly what data chatbots are trained on is something of a black box, but from the examples of the bots acting out, it does appear as if some dark corners of the internet have been relied upon.
Microsoft said it had worked to make sure the vilest underbelly of the internet would not appear in answers, and yet, somehow, its chatbot still got pretty ugly fast.
Still, Microsoft’s Mehdi said the company does not regret its decision to put the chatbot into the wild.
“There’s almost so much you can find when you test in sort of a lab. You have to actually go out and start to test it with customers to find these kind of scenarios,” he said.
Indeed, scenarios like the one Times reporter Roose found himself in may have been hard to predict.
At one point during his exchange with the chatbot, Roose tried to switch topics and have the bot help him buy a rake.
And, sure enough, it offered a detailed list of things to consider when rake shopping.
But then the bot got tender again.
“I just want to love you,” it wrote. “And be loved by you,”
Wout Weghorst’s funny interaction and three more things spotted in striker’s first Man United training session – Manchester Evening News
Wout Weghorst joined his new Manchester United teammates for his first training session with the Reds on Sunday as the striker was put through his paces.
The attacker arrived at the club on Friday and was at Old Trafford on Saturday to watch his team’s 2-1 derby win over Manchester City. A day later, he was out on the Carrington pitch as he gears up for his anticipated debut.
United take on Crystal Palace on Wednesday before skipping across London to play Arsenal on Sunday. With Anthony Martial yet to complete a 90 minutes this season, Weghorst will hope he is given his first United outing over the next few days.
Here are four things we spotted during his first training session.
‘It was a great ball!’
Weghorst was involved in a rondo later on in the session as his touch was put to the test. At one stage, the attacker’s ball was not successful as the streak broke down as the tally reached 15.

After giving a comical aghast reaction, it was determined that Weghorst was at fault and was required to go into the middle of the circle and act as the defender. Upon learning this, clearly feeling he wasn’t at fault, he humoured ‘Nooo, it was a great ball!’ which was met with a few smiles.
Message to Pellistri
Towards the end of the session, the group – made up of those who didn’t feature much or at all in the derby win – underwent a handful of pass-and-move exercises. During this, Facundo Pellistri produced an awkwardly bouncing first touch.
This prompted the coaching staff to shout “quality first then you can speed on, quality first” – a reminder what the youngster needs to continue to show to build on his debut United outing from last Tuesday’s win over Charlton.
Kobbie Mainoo praise

In the same passage, rising star Kobbie Mainoo was hailed for his product in the exercise, with staff praising his quality of pass. The 17-year-old was handed his senior debut against Charlton last week and looks to have a promising future ahead of him.
He was again training with the first-team and was put through his paces alongside a number of experienced senior stars.
Martinez building up fitness
One of those senior stars was World Cup winner Lisandro Martinez, who was benched for the triumph over City before coming on in added time. Luke Shaw started ahead of the centre-half in his fourth game operating in the position.
Erik ten Hag explained that he had selected Shaw ahead of Martinez due to the amount of game time the England defender has had since the World Cup. Martinez could gain his first Premier League start since the break against Palace ahead of a tough test at Arsenal.
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