Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Xprize Founder Peter Diamandis Launches New Contest To Announce New ‘Star Trek’

An iPhone hacking toolkit used by Russian spies likely came from a US military contractor

Bluesky CEO Jay Graber is stepping down

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    OpenAI and Google employees are quick to defend Anthropic in the DOD lawsuit

    10 March 2026

    OpenAI hardware executive Caitlin Kalinowski resigns in response to Pentagon deal

    9 March 2026

    Will Pentagon standoff over Anthropic scare startups out of defense work?

    9 March 2026

    A roadmap for artificial intelligence, if anyone will listen

    8 March 2026

    Grammarly’s “expert review” is missing the real experts

    8 March 2026
  • Apps

    Periwinkle makes it even easier to host social media on Bluesky’s AT Protocol

    10 March 2026

    Meta will enable competing AI chatbots on WhatsApp in Europe, but for a fee

    9 March 2026

    Match Group COO out as dating apps struggle to connect with Gen Z

    9 March 2026

    Roblox launches real-time AI chat rewording to filter out banned language

    8 March 2026

    These are the countries that are moving to ban social media for children

    8 March 2026
  • Crypto

    Hackers stole over $2.7 billion in crypto in 2025, data shows

    23 December 2025

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025

    Why Benchmark Made a Rare Crypto Bet on Trading App Fomo, with $17M Series A

    6 November 2025

    Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko is a big fan of agentic coding

    30 October 2025

    MoviePass opens Mogul fantasy league game to the public

    29 October 2025
  • Fintech

    X taps William Shatner to give invitations to his payment service, X Money

    4 March 2026

    Stripe wants to turn your AI costs into a profit center

    3 March 2026

    3 days left: Save up to $680 on your ticket to Disrupt 2026

    25 February 2026

    More startups surpass $10M ARR in 3 months than ever before

    24 February 2026

    Stripe, PayPal Ventures Bet on India’s Xflow to Fix Cross-Border B2B Payments

    24 February 2026
  • Hardware

    Honor says its ‘Robot phone’ with moving camera can dance to music

    8 March 2026

    Apple unveils M5 Pro and M5 Max chips with new ‘Fusion Architecture’

    8 March 2026

    Eight Sleep raises $50 million at $1.5 billion valuation

    7 March 2026

    Quantum scale-up Pasqal plans $2 billion SPAC listing, vows to ‘remain French’

    7 March 2026

    PC shipments in India surpass peak of pandemic as first-time users upgrade

    6 March 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    Xprize Founder Peter Diamandis Launches New Contest To Announce New ‘Star Trek’

    10 March 2026

    It looks like the DOJ isn’t going to break up Live Nation and Ticketmaster

    9 March 2026

    PopSockets founder David Barnett talks about building a viral business

    7 March 2026

    Netflix acquires Ben Affleck’s AI film production company InterPositive

    6 March 2026

    Amazon is rolling out a redesigned Fire TV app

    6 March 2026
  • Security

    An iPhone hacking toolkit used by Russian spies likely came from a US military contractor

    10 March 2026

    Russian government hackers are targeting Signal and WhatsApp users, Dutch spies warn

    9 March 2026

    The Ring’s Jamie Siminoff tries to calm privacy fears from the Super Bowl, but his answers may not help

    9 March 2026

    Google says half of all zero-days it tracked in 2025 targeted buggy enterprise technology

    7 March 2026

    TriZetto confirms 3.4 million people’s health and personal data stolen during breach

    6 March 2026
  • Startups

    Bluesky CEO Jay Graber is stepping down

    10 March 2026

    Science Corp. raises $230 million as it races to bring its brain implant to market

    6 March 2026

    EXCLUSIVE: Luma Launches Creative AI Agents Powered by New ‘Unified Intelligence’ Models

    6 March 2026

    How 1,000+ Customer Calls Shaped a Groundbreaking AI Business

    5 March 2026

    Decagon Completes First Auction at $4.5B Value

    5 March 2026
  • Transportation

    Electric air taxis are set to fly in 26 states

    10 March 2026

    The 2027 Chevy Bolt is the McRib of the automotive world

    9 March 2026

    TechCrunch Mobility: Rivian’s R2 game

    9 March 2026

    OSHA death detection at Rivian warehouse

    7 March 2026

    Zeno raises $25 million to accelerate production of its battery-swapping motorcycles

    6 March 2026
  • Venture

    Founders Fund is approaching $6 billion for its latest growth fund, sources say

    10 March 2026

    Robinhood’s startup fund stumbles in its NYSE debut

    7 March 2026

    City Detect, which uses artificial intelligence to help cities stay safe and clean, raises $13M Series A

    7 March 2026

    Lio raises $30 million from Andreessen Horowitz and others to automate business procurement

    5 March 2026

    The candidate that Silicon Valley built is now the one they want to tear down

    3 March 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»AI»8 predictions for artificial intelligence in 2024
AI

8 predictions for artificial intelligence in 2024

techtost.comBy techtost.com20 December 202309 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
8 Predictions For Artificial Intelligence In 2024
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

This last year was a boom for artificial intelligence, as the technology went from niche to mainstream about as quickly as anything else. 2024, however, will be the year the hype becomes reality, as people consider the potential and limitations of artificial intelligence in general. Here are a few ways we think it will.

OpenAI is becoming a product company

After the leadership reshuffle in November, OpenAI will be a changed company — maybe not externally, but the fallout from Sam Altman in charge will be felt at every level. And one of the ways we expect it to manifest is in the “send it” mentality.

We’ll see this with the GPT store, which was originally scheduled to launch in December, but understandably delayed due to C-suite spasms. The “app store for AI” will be pushed hard as The platform to get your AI games and tools from Hugging Face or any open source model. They have a great model to work with, Apple’s, and they’re going to follow it all the way to the bank.

Expect more such moves from OpenAI in 2024, as the caution and academic reserve exercised by the previous board gives way to an inappropriate lust for markets and customers.

Other big companies with AI efforts will also follow this trend (for example, expect Gemini/Bard to attract a ton of Google products), but I suspect it will be more pronounced in this case.

Agents, video creation and music production graduate from visual to experimental

Some niche applications of AI models will grow beyond the “eh” state in 2024, including agent-based models and genetic multimedia.

If AI is going to help you do more than summarize or create lists of things, it will need access to things like your spreadsheets, ticketing interfaces, transportation apps, and so on. 2023 saw a few tentative attempts at this “agent” approach, but none really caught on. We don’t really expect any to take off in 2024, but dealer-based models will show their stuff a little more convincingly than they did last year, and some clutch use cases will emerge for notoriously tedious processes like making insurance claims.

Video and audio will also find places where their disadvantages are not so visible. In the hands of experienced creators, the lack of photorealism isn’t a problem, and we’ll see video AI used in fun and interesting ways. Likewise, music production models will likely become some major productions, such as games, where professional musicians can leverage the tools to create an endless soundtrack.

The boundaries of monolithic LLMs are becoming clearer

So far there has been great optimism about the capabilities of large language models, which have indeed proven more capable than expected, and have grown correspondingly more as more computations are added. But 2024 will be the year that something gives. Exactly where is impossible to predict, as research operates at the frontier of this field.

The seemingly magical “emerging” capabilities of LLMs will be better studied and understood in 2024, and things like their inability to multiply large numbers will make more sense.

At the same time, we will start to see diminishing returns in parameter measurements, to the point where training a model of 500 billion parameters can technically produce better results, but the computation required to do this could demonstrably be deployed more efficiently. A single monolithic model is unwieldy and expensive, while a mixture of experts—a collection of smaller, more specialized models and possibly multimodal models—can prove nearly as effective while being much easier to update piecemeal.

Marketing meets reality

The simple fact is that the hype created in 2023 will be very difficult for companies to sustain. The marketing claims made about machine learning systems that companies have adopted to keep up are going to get their quarterly and annual reviews… and they are very likely to be found wanting.

Expect significant customer churn from AI tools as the benefits don’t justify the costs and risks. At the far end of this spectrum, we are likely to see lawsuits and regulatory action against AI service providers who have failed to back up their claims.

While the capabilities will continue to grow and evolve, the products of 2023 will not all survive by a long shot, and there will be a round of consolidation as wavering wave riders fall and are consumed.

Apple steps in

Apple has a well-established pattern of waiting, watching, and learning from other companies’ failures, and then blowing it with a refined and refined point of view that puts others to shame. The time is right for Apple to do this in AI, not only because if it waits too long, its competition could destroy the market, but because the technology is ripe for its improvement.

I’d expect an AI that focuses on practical applications of user data, using Apple’s increasingly central place in their lives to integrate the many brands and ecosystems the company is familiar with. There will probably also be a smart and elegant way to handle problematic or dangerous messages, and while it will almost certainly have multimodal understanding (mostly for handling user images), I imagine they’ll skip media generation altogether. Expect some narrowly tailored but impressive agent capabilities, too: “Siri, get a table for 4 at a downtown sushi place around 7 and book a car to pick us up.”

What’s hard to say is whether they’ll bill it as an improved Siri or an entirely new service, Apple AI, with a name you can choose yourself. They may feel the old brand is saddled with years of comparative incompetence, but millions already say “hey Siri” every 10 seconds, so they’re more likely to choose to keep that momentum going.

Legal cases are built and broken

We saw a fair number of lawsuits filed in 2023, but few saw any real movement, let alone success. Most lawsuits over copyright and other wrongdoing in the AI ​​industry are still pending. 2024 will see many of these fall to the wayside as companies withhold critical information such as data and training methods, making claims such as the use of thousands of copyrighted books difficult to prove in court.

That was only the beginning, however, and many of these lawsuits were filed essentially on the beginning. While they may not succeed, they may open up the process enough during testimony and discovery that companies would rather settle than have certain information come to light. 2024 will also bring new lawsuits, those related to the misuse and abuse of AI, such as wrongful termination, bias in hiring and lending, and other areas where AI is put to work without much thought.

But while some egregious examples of misuse will be punished, the lack of relevant laws specifically addressing this means that it will necessarily only be brought to court by accident. On that note…

Early adopters of the new rules follow the horns

Big moves like the EU’s AI law could change the way the industry operates, but they tend to be slow to come into force. This is by design, so companies don’t have to adapt to new rules overnight, but it also means we won’t see the impact of these big laws for quite some time, except for those willing to make changes proactively and voluntarily. There will be a lot of “we’re starting the process of…” conversations. (Also expect some quiet lawsuits challenging various parts of the laws.)

To that end, we can expect a new booming AI compliance industry, as the billions poured into the technology require matching investments (on a smaller scale, but still significant) to ensure tools and processes meet international and local standards.

Unfortunately for anyone hoping for meaningful federal regulation in the US, 2024 is not the year to expect movement on this front. While it will be a year for artificial intelligence and everyone will be calling for new laws, the US government and electorate will be too busy with the dumpster fire that will be the 2024 election.

The 2024 election is a garbage fire and AI is making it worse

How the 2024 presidential election will play out is, really, anyone’s guess at this point. There’s too much up in the air to make any real predictions, except that, as before, influencers will use every tool in the box to move the needle, including artificial intelligence in whatever form is convenient.

For example, expect bot accounts and fake blogs to spout nonsense 24/7. Some people who work full-time with a text and image generator can cover a lot of space, creating hundreds of social media and blog posts with completely made-up images and news. “Flooding the zone” has always been an effective tactic, and now AI acts as a job multiplier, allowing for more massive yet targeted campaigns. Expect both false positives and false negatives in a concerted effort to confuse the narrative and make people distrust what they see and read. This is a profitable state for those politicians who thrive on chaos.

The organizations will tout “artificial intelligence” analytics to support voter roll purges, vote count challenges and other efforts to suppress or interfere with existing processes.

The resulting video and audio will join the fray, and while neither is perfect, they’re good enough to be believable with a bit of blur: The clip doesn’t need to be perfect, because it’ll come across as a grainy zoomed-in mobile shot phone in a dark room or a hot mic at a private event or what have you. Then it becomes a matter of “who are you going to believe, me or him?” And that’s all some people need.

There will probably be some half-hearted attempts to block the use of generated content in this way, but these posts can’t be removed fast enough by the likes of Meta and Google and the idea that X can (or will) effectively monitoring and removal of such content is unlikely. It’s going to be a bad time!

artificial Artificial Intelligence intelligence predictions technological forecasts
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleClaim, a social network that lets users earn and exchange rewards with friends, raises $4 million
Next Article Ask Sophie: Is it even easier for AI founders to get green cards?
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

OpenAI and Google employees are quick to defend Anthropic in the DOD lawsuit

10 March 2026

OpenAI hardware executive Caitlin Kalinowski resigns in response to Pentagon deal

9 March 2026

Will Pentagon standoff over Anthropic scare startups out of defense work?

9 March 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Xprize Founder Peter Diamandis Launches New Contest To Announce New ‘Star Trek’

10 March 2026

An iPhone hacking toolkit used by Russian spies likely came from a US military contractor

10 March 2026

Bluesky CEO Jay Graber is stepping down

10 March 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

X taps William Shatner to give invitations to his payment service, X Money

4 March 2026

Stripe wants to turn your AI costs into a profit center

3 March 2026

3 days left: Save up to $680 on your ticket to Disrupt 2026

25 February 2026
Startups

Bluesky CEO Jay Graber is stepping down

Science Corp. raises $230 million as it races to bring its brain implant to market

EXCLUSIVE: Luma Launches Creative AI Agents Powered by New ‘Unified Intelligence’ Models

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

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