VW, Rivian, Nissan, BMW, Genesis, Audi and Volvo lose EV tax credits starting tomorrow

https://www.autoblog.com/2023/04/17/ev-tax-credits-end-vw-rivian-nissan-bmw-genesis-audi-volvo/


The U.S. Treasury said Monday that Volkswagen, BMW, Nissan, Rivian, Hyundai and Volvo electric vehicles will lose access to a $7,500 tax credit under new battery sourcing rules.

The Treasury said the new requirements effective Tuesday will also cut by half credits for the Tesla Model 3 Standard Range Rear Wheel Drive to $3,750 but other Tesla models will retain the full $7,500 credit.

Vehicles losing credits Tuesday are the BMW 330e, BMW X5 xDrive45e, Genesis Electrified GV70, Nissan Leaf , Rivian R1S and R1T, Volkswagen ID.4 as well as the plug-in hybrid electric Audi Q5 TFSI e Quattro and plug-in hybrid (PHEV) electric Volvo S60. The Swedish carmaker is 82%-owned by China’s Zhejiang Geely Holding Group.

The rules are aimed at weaning the United States off dependence on China for EV battery supply chains and are part of President Joe Biden’s effort to make 50% of U.S. new vehicle sales by 2030 EVs or PHEVs.

Hyundai said in a statement it was committed to its long-range EV plans and that it “will utilize key provisions in the Inflation Reduction Act to accelerate the transition to electrification.”

Rivian declined to comment and the other automakers could not immediately be reached for comment.

Treasury also disclosed General Motors electric Chevrolet Bolt and Bolt EUV will qualify for the full $7,500 tax credit.

GM said earlier it expected at least some of its EVS would qualify for the $7,500 tax credit under the new rules, including the 2023 Cadillac Lyriq and forthcoming Chevrolet Equinox EV SUV and Blazer EV SUV. Treasury said all GM EVs will qualify.

Earlier, Ford Motor and Chrysler-parent Stellantis said most of their electric and PHEV models would see tax credits halved to $3,750 on April 18. Treasury confirmed the automakers’ calculations.

The rules were announced last month and mandated by Congress in August as part of the $430 billion Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).

The IRA requires 50% of the value of battery components be produced or assembled in North America to qualify for $3,750, and 40% of the value of critical minerals sourced from the United States or a free trade partner for a $3,750 credit.

The law required vehicles to be assembled in North America to qualify for any tax credits, which in August eliminated nearly 70% of eligible models and on Jan. 1 new price caps and limits on buyers income took effect.

Last week, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed new emissions rules that forecast 60% of new vehicle sales in 2030 would be EVs.

A preliminary administration analysis found nearly 65% of first quarter EV sales qualified under North American final assembly and price cap requirements; more than 90% of those previously eligible first quarter sales remain eligible for at least a $3,750 credit.

Treasury in December said EVs ineligible for the $7,500 consumer tax credit could qualify for a commercial leasing $7,500 credit.

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April 17, 2023 at 10:55AM

OpenAI’s CEO Says the Age of Giant AI Models Is Already Over

https://www.wired.com/story/openai-ceo-sam-altman-the-age-of-giant-ai-models-is-already-over/


The stunning capabilities of ChatGPT, the chatbot from startup OpenAI, has triggered a surge of new interest and investment in artificial intelligence. But late last week, OpenAI’s CEO warned that the research strategy that birthed the bot is played out. It’s unclear exactly where future advances will come from.

OpenAI has delivered a series of impressive advances in AI that works with language in recent years by taking existing machine-learning algorithms and scaling them up to previously unimagined size. GPT-4, the latest of those projects, was likely trained using trillions of words of text and many thousands of powerful computer chips. The process cost over $100 million.

But the company’s CEO, Sam Altman, says further progress will not come from making models bigger. “I think we’re at the end of the era where it’s going to be these, like, giant, giant models,” he told an audience at an event held at MIT late last week. “We’ll make them better in other ways.”

Altman’s declaration suggests an unexpected twist in the race to develop and deploy new AI algorithms. Since OpenAI launched ChatGPT in November, Microsoft has used the underlying technology to add a chatbot to its Bing search engine, and Google has launched a rival chatbot called Bard. Many people have rushed to experiment with using the new breed of chatbot to help with work or personal tasks.

Meanwhile, numerous well-funded startups, including AnthropicAI21Cohere, and Character.AI, are throwing enormous resources into building ever larger algorithms in an effort to catch up with OpenAI’s technology. The initial version of ChatGPT was based on a slightly upgraded version of GPT-3, but users can now also access a version powered by the more capable GPT-4.

Altman’s statement suggests that GPT-4 could be the last major advance to emerge from OpenAI’s strategy of making the models bigger and feeding them more data. He did not say what kind of research strategies or techniques might take its place. In the paper describing GPT-4, OpenAI says its estimates suggest diminishing returns on scaling up model size. Altman said there are also physical limits to how many data centers the company can build and how quickly it can build them.

Nick Frosst, a cofounder at Cohere who previously worked on AI at Google, says Altman’s feeling that going bigger will not work indefinitely rings true. He, too, believes that progress on transformers, the type of machine learning model at the heart of GPT-4 and its rivals, lies beyond scaling. “There are lots of ways of making transformers way, way better and more useful, and lots of them don’t involve adding parameters to the model,” he says. Frosst says that new AI model designs, or architectures, and further tuning based on human feedback are promising directions that many researchers are already exploring.

Each version of OpenAI’s influential family of language algorithms consists of an artificial neural network, software loosely inspired by the way neurons work together, which is trained to predict the words that should follow a given string of text.

via Wired Top Stories https://www.wired.com

April 17, 2023 at 06:11AM

This Tool Knows Whether You’re Overpaying for Rent in NYC

https://lifehacker.com/this-tool-knows-whether-youre-overpaying-for-rent-in-ny-1850325047


Rent prices rose by an average of 14% last year, and it doesn’t look like those heart-clutching price hikes are going to stop any time soon. For anyone wondering exactly how much they’re getting ripped off in this rental hellscape, there are tools like RentHop RentCompare, which is specifically designed to help renters in New York City figure out if they’re overpaying or underpaying for rent. While the app is specific to NYC homes right now, the price tool is still a great way to explore how much different neighborhoods cost and help you see where you stand in the current rental market.

Here’s how you can use this rent compare tool, no matter where you live.

How to use RentCompare

RentCompare is an interactive tool that allows renters to compare a rental price across the average rent for an apartment’s size and neighborhood. On renthop.com, you enter your email and your neighborhood, current rent, apartment size, and amenities. Then, RentCompare reveals how it compares to similar apartments in the area.

The goal is to “put the power back in renters’ hands” by showing them whether their current rental price is below the average for apartments in the neighborhood with the same bedroom size. Of course, you may pay more than the average renter if you’re also paying for amenities like a doorman, roof deck, or in-unit washer/dryer (my greatest dream).

Consider what these famous fictional New Yorkers were “paying”

If you’re looking for an apartment in NYC, you can use a rental listings site like Zillow and compare the listed prices to comparable apartments listed on RentHop’s RentCompare. And if you live somewhere that is not NYC, you can use Zillow to compare rent prices to what is most likely a much more affordable city. Or, you can still play around with tool—just pretend to be some of your favorite famous New Yorkers.

A few years back, Insider got to the bottom of how much NYC’s most famous fictional apartments actually cost. Plug in some of the truly exorbitant apartment prices below and see whether or not Seinfeld was getting a fair deal. (What’s the deal with getting a fair deal, am I right?) (Spoiler: He was getting a great deal, considering the fun fact that Seinfeld’s TV apartment is physically impossible). Mess around with these wild home prices:

  • Friends (90 Bedford Street, West Village): $2 million
  • Sex And The City (66 Perry Street, West Village): $600,000
  • Seinfeld (129 West 81st Street, Upper West Side): $900,000
  • Big Daddy (16 Mercer Street, SoHo): $2.5 million
  • The Cosby Show (Brooklyn Heights): $11 million
  • Succession (specifically Kendall Roy’s ex-wife) (Tribeca’s Woolworth Tower Residences, Tribeca): $23.355 million (This one was pulled from Architectural Digest.)

Keep in mind that rent varies across the city, while most fictional New Yorkers seem to get the luxury of living on the Upper West Side. Last year, GBSN Research found that the median rent is $3,550 in Manhattan, $2,850 in Brooklyn, and $2,400 in Queens.

via Lifehacker https://lifehacker.com

April 17, 2023 at 10:20AM

AI Art Piece Wins Sony’s Photography Contest, Artist Refuses the Award

https://gizmodo.com/sony-world-photography-award-ai-art-winner-eldagsen-1850343317


An entry into the World Photography Organization’s Sony World Photography Awards has brought new attention to the conversation around AI-generated art. After artist Boris Eldagsen entered his AI-generated piece “The Electrician” into the art contest and won, he opted to turn down the prize.

Maybe AI-Written Scripts are a Bad Idea?

“The Electrician” features two women—one leaning her face on the other’s back—in a grainy sepia tone with streaks of light that recall the “spirit photography” of the early 20th century. It’s a beautiful work of art that showcases clear talent from the artist, except the work was created in collaboration with an AI used by Eldagsen, who refers to himself as a “photomedia artist” on his website. Eldagsen entered the Open Category at the Sony World Photography Awards according to his website and won with “The Electrician.” As a winner, Eldagsen would have received photography equipment from Sony, inclusion in a World Photography Organization’s book and exhibit, as well as plenty of exposure for his career.

“I have been photographing since 1989, been a photomedia artist since 2000. After two decades of photography, my artistic focus has shifted to exploring the creative possibilities of AI generators,” Eldagsen wrote on his website. “The work SWPA has chosen is the result of a complex interplay of prompt engineering, inpainting and outpainting that draws on my wealth of photographic knowledge. For me, working with AI image generators is a co-creation, in which I am the director. It is not about pressing a button—and done it is.”

As Peta Pixel reports, the World Photography Organization announced the awards winners on March 14, with Eldagsen being among the finalists. A month later, on April 13, Eldagsen announced on his website that he would not accept the award. As Eldagsen writes in his announcement, he applied to the contest as a “cheeky monkey” looking to test if “competitions are prepared for AI images. They are not.” The World Photography Organization did not immediately return Gizmodo’s request for comment on Eldagsen’s piece or his decision to refuse the prize.

The conversation around the applications of AI has seemingly come to a head in recent months, and Eldagsen was not the first artist to win a competition with AI. In August of last year, Jason Allen submitted his piece, titled Théåtre D’opéra Spatial, to the Colorado State Fair Fine Arts competition, and he won. In that case, the artist was happy to accept the accolades.

As the AI boom continues, there has been a substantial rise in AI-generated art, with Runway’s Gen-2, and the infamous DALL-E 2 from OpenAI demonstrating how easy it can be for a computer to create video and images from text. The issue with most of these generators is their clear tendency to lift pre-existing (often copyrighted) material from other sources, only to Frankenstein it into an original piece of art.

Want to know more about AI, chatbots, and the future of machine learning? Check out our full coverage of artificial intelligence, or browse our guides to The Best Free AI Art Generators, The Best ChatGPT Alternatives, and Everything We Know About OpenAI’s ChatGPT.

via Gizmodo https://gizmodo.com

April 17, 2023 at 09:45AM

AI-Powered Bing Now Easily Accessible in SwiftKey Keyboard

https://www.droid-life.com/2023/04/14/ai-powered-bing-now-easily-accessible-in-swiftkey-keyboard/

Microsoft announced this week that it has integrated and rolled out its AI-powered Bing service directly into the SwiftKey keyboard app for both Android and iOS. This puts the AI goodness that the tech world can’t get enough of right at your little fingertips.

Microsoft outlines three unique ways you can use Bing via SwiftKey — Search, Chat, and Tone. For searching things, let’s not forget the last time Bing-powered search came to SwiftKey, years ago in 2018. This time, there’s AI and what should be a much better flow for the whole experience without the need for switching apps.

The more interesting stuff is Chat and Tone. As explained by Microsoft, with the Chat functionality, “Bing can help if everybody’s cracking jokes in a chat thread and you need a clever pun, or you’re new to the area and are texting some new friends to propose a good local restaurant.” It’s extremely contextual in that sense, so essentially, Bing can make you seem like a much funnier/wittier person than you actually are.

For Tone, Bing can help you write messages in real time. For example, it can help you communicate with colleagues in a more professional manner or can simply help you find the right word for a particular situation.

Whether you struggle to be formal in your work emails, or you’re learning a new language and want help with the nuances of word choice, the Tone feature has got you covered, with tones to make your words sound more professional, casual, polite, or concise enough for a social post.

I’m pretty dug into my Gboard, but I could see myself giving this a try to see if this AI stuff is all its cracked up to be. It does sound useful.

This update is available now.

Google Play Link

// Microsoft

Read the original post: AI-Powered Bing Now Easily Accessible in SwiftKey Keyboard

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April 14, 2023 at 10:57AM

This Verizon Unlimited Plan Comparison Chart is Incredibly Helpful

https://www.droid-life.com/2023/04/14/this-verizon-unlimited-plan-comparison-chart-is-incredibly-helpful/

Verizon has a lot of Unlimited plans, and for many, it can be rather confusing to know what perks, benefits, and limitations each one has. Thankfully for us, there are people like reddit user maxypantsyo who go out of their way to make our lives a little easier. Props, maxypantsyo.

In a chart they published to reddit, we get a complete breakdown of each of the six Unlimited plans that Verizon currently offers, plus the various things that each plan gets and how much they cost. For example, the 5G Do More comes with 6 months of Apple Music, but the plan right above that, the 5G Get More plan, has no timed subscription – Apple Music is simply included with the plan. We can also see how the basic unlimited plans, like Welcome Unlimited and 5G Start, do not include access to 5G UWB, while all plans do include basic 5G access nationwide.

This chart is incredibly helpful to people like us who have to talk about these plans, but also to consumers who get lost in Verizon’s never ending remix of these plans and their names for marketing purposes. It’s a total pain to keep track of, so again, a big shoutout goes to maxypantsyo.

People are awesome.

// reddit

Read the original post: This Verizon Unlimited Plan Comparison Chart is Incredibly Helpful

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April 14, 2023 at 01:04PM

Electric Car Production Will Accelerate after EPA’s Historic Tailpipe Emissions Rules

https://subscriber.politicopro.com/article/eenews/2023/04/13/epa-used-the-climate-law-on-cars-power-plants-are-next-00091811


CLIMATEWIRE | The tailpipe emissions rules EPA proposed Wednesday are the sticks to Congress’ carrots, providing the clearest view yet of how the agency plans to leverage the hundreds of billions of dollars lawmakers have pumped into clean energy and infrastructure.

EPA built its two market-transforming rules on top of generous incentives in last year’s Inflation Reduction Act, or IRA, and the 2021 bipartisan infrastructure law. That resulted in the agency proposing the most aggressive restrictions in U.S. history on the carbon, smog and soot emitted from compact cars all the way up to long-haul trucks.

It’s a pattern EPA will likely repeat when it releases its power plant carbon rules later this month.

On Wednesday, EPA Administrator Michael Regan said that the agency was “partnering very strategically” with the climate and infrastructure laws in its rules for light-duty and medium-duty vehicles. The proposal for light-duty vehicles — which aims to electrify two-thirds of new cars by model year 2032 — is feasible because EPA is “marrying regulation with historic incentives,” he said.

The rules are built upon newly enacted measures like the IRA’s $7,500 tax credit for EVs, the infrastructure law’s investments in charging stations and billions of dollars in last year’s CHIPS and Science Act for domestic semiconductor manufacturing.

“We’re rowing in the same direction,” Regan told an audience seated in the hot April sun in front of EPA headquarters.

The climate, infrastructure and science laws have reshaped the auto industry’s future, in turn changing the baseline EPA uses to determine the costs and benefits of its vehicle emissions rules. The laws have similarly changed how economic models predict the power sector’s future (Climatewire, April 4).

That’s important because the Clean Air Act demands that EPA consider cost and other factors when issuing a rule. Now, thanks to the new laws, the U.S. Treasury will shoulder a share of the cost for “manufacture, sale, and use of zero-emission vehicles by addressing elements critical to the advancement of clean transportation and clean electricity generation,” EPA states in the preamble to the light-duty vehicle proposal.

In short, federal incentives will prompt more automakers and consumers to turn to EVs. In the rule for cars and SUVs, EPA cites an analysis from the International Council on Clean Transportation that found electric vehicles will make up between 56 and 67 percent of new car sales by model year 2032 — before any new rules on tailpipe emissions.

The rule’s preamble includes a 3 ½ page section on the climate and infrastructure laws and — to a lesser degree — the CHIPS law. But the laws are also the backbone of EPA’s justification for the rule, with references sprinkled throughout its 758 pages.

The climate law’s $7,500 tax credit makes some EVs “more affordable to buy and operate today than comparable [internal combustion engine] vehicles,” EPA states in the rule. Hence, a tough rule that pushes manufacturers toward EVs won’t burden consumers, EPA asserts.

The agency also cites the climate law’s tax credits for battery cell and module manufacturers, which it says will help bring down the cost of production. Both credits phase out between 2030 and 2032, when the rule ends.

The rule also assumes the infrastructure law’s $7.5 billion investment in the nation’s charging network will make it easier for EVs to eat into gasoline-powered vehicles’ market share, bringing emissions down.

Market changes that were already in the pipeline can’t be attributed to new regulations. The climate and infrastructure laws have thus made EPA’s car and truck rules — which Regan called the strongest in history — look like part of the policy landscape rather than an outlier.

“EPA’s not setting these standards in a vacuum,” noted Chet France, a former EPA official who is now a consultant with the Environmental Defense Fund, during a Tuesday briefing. “It’s in the context of where the industry is headed, not only worldwide but specifically in this country.”

Right policy at right time?

This week’s tailpipe rules — and upcoming rules to limit carbon emissions from power plants — will be more heavily influenced by Congress’ recent influx of climate spending than most other EPA rules. That’s because the transportation and power sectors are top greenhouse gas emitters, making them targets of both climate legislation and agency regulation.

“These are the first rules where both what you do and what it costs would be affected by those incentives,” said David Doniger, senior strategic director for climate change at the Natural Resources Defense Council. “What EPA would do, what were the emission limits that EPA would impose for cars or for power plants, and what those emission limits would cost are very much affected by the IRA in the direction of bringing those costs down and making it possible for EPA to justify regulations under the Clean Air Act.”

The IRA also bolsters the tailpipe rules by affirming that EPA has the authority to regulate the six greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act, and by showing Congress’ intention to decarbonize the power and transportation sectors, Doniger said. Both elements could help the administration defend rules in court, he said.

But the auto industry has expressed reservations about the draft rules, which would require auto manufacturers to cut the average emissions of their vehicles by more than 50 percent between model years 2026 and 2032.

John Bozzella, president and CEO of Alliance for Automotive Innovation, called the rules’ targets “very high” in a blog post Wednesday.

The Biden administration’s previous target for EVs — making 50 percent of car sales electric by 2030 — was already a “stretch goal and predicated on several conditions” that required the full force of the IRA to reach, he said.

Bozzella, whose group represents major U.S. car companies, said the rules’ feasibility would depend on factors outside of the industry’s control, including “charging infrastructure, supply chains, grid resiliency, the availability of low carbon fuels and critical minerals.”

He acknowledged baseline assumptions had changed because of new legislation.

“But it remains to be seen whether the refueling infrastructure incentives and supply-side provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act, the bipartisan infrastructure law, and the CHIPS and Science Act are sufficient to support electrification at the levels envisioned by the proposed standards over the coming years,” Bozzella wrote.

He also pointed to the Treasury Department’s recently released guidance for which vehicles qualify for the $7,500 EV tax credit. The guidance requires cars be made and sourced in the United States or its closest trading partners — which Bozzella said would mean “far fewer EV models” would qualify for the purchase incentive EPA’s light-duty vehicle rule counts upon.

But while major carmakers are cautious, the EV industry is anxious to line up behind EPA’s rules — or even push for stronger ones.

“This is the right policy at the right time because of the industrial policy put in place over the last two years,” said Albert Gore, executive director of the Zero Emissions Transportation Association.

The infrastructure law dedicated billions of dollars to building public charging stations for electric vehicles, Gore said. Most EV charging happens at home, but the network of chargers is expected to help quell drivers’ anxiety about long-distance driving. And the law has provisions to address other common complaints, like the slow charging speed and frequent outages (Energywire, March 29).

The IRA also not only expanded the tax incentives for car and truck buyers, but created financial incentives that will shore up the battery-making and car-manufacturing industries, as well. Even before the law passed last year, billions of dollars in new battery and vehicle plants were announced in the Midwest and Southeast.

“The IRA has really accelerated that,” Gore said.

 Reporter Mike Lee contributed.

This story also appears in Energywire.

Reprinted from E&E News with permission from POLITICO, LLC. Copyright 2023. E&E News provides essential news for energy and environment professionals.

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April 13, 2023 at 11:36AM