KD

Kyt Dotson

Journalist at SiliconANGLE

Kyt Dotson is a Senior Editor at SiliconAngle and works to cover beats surrounding DevOps, AI, security, gaming, and cutting edge technology. Before joining SiliconAngle, Kyt worked as a software engineer starting at Motorola in Q&A to eventually settle at Pets911.com where he helped build a vast database for pet adoption and a lost and found system. Kyt is a published author who writes science fiction and fantasy works that incorporate ideas from modern-day technological innovation and explore the outcome of living with those technologies.

Publications

  • SiliconANGLE
    5 articles
  • SiliconANGLE & theCUBE

Writes Most On

AITabnineArtificialIntelligenceCybersecurityFraudDetectionAiTOOLSCodingLanguagesStackOverflowCodeCompanionChatGPTContentManagementSystemDataScienceAuthorTechtrendsAlgorithmDevelopmentCodeGenerationReportingSoftwareDevelopersEfficientPromptsAdaptavistGroupAuthorsTechnewsSiliconANGLECodeLearningTechIndustryHealthcareAITechnologyChatbotsGitHubCopilotAIModelsDataPrivacyJournalismSupercloud4ChatGPTPlusCodeCompletionSyntheticdataCodeWhispererJournalistCodingToolsLLMPairProgrammerWritersLearningFrameworksBugDiscoveryGoogleCodeReviewsDeveloperAssistiveToolsTrainingDataCodeDebuggingTechJournalism
  • —SiliconANGLE
  • How synthetic data powers AI innovation – and creates new risks
    28 Feb 2024—SiliconANGLE
    As artificial intelligence models continue to evolve at ever-increasing speed, the demand for training data and the ability to test capabilities grows alongside them. But in a world with equally growing demands for security and privacy, it’s not always possible to rely solely on real-world information – and sometimes authentic data is scarce or difficult to obtain. The answer to this dilemma? Made-up data — or, as it’s known in AI circles, synthetic data. Synthetic data is information that’s...
  • Developers are embracing AI-enabled tools. Here’s how that’s changing the way they code
    22 Oct 2023—SiliconANGLE
    Ever since generative artificial intelligence tools such as OpenAI LP’s ChatGPT and Google LLC’s Bard jumped into the limelight, the entire world has become enamored with the ability of AI’s capability to hold conversations and do impressive work — and one of the most prominent early uses is helping software developers write code. Since the extreme popularity of ChatGPT and its amazing capability to hold conversations and even write essays and stories, a number of code-generating chatbots and...
  • —SiliconANGLE

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