News and notes from around the interweb: Delta CEO warns against use of AI as his own airline now uses it to set ticket prices . He says he experimented using it to draft his commencement address at Emory, but: I also noticed the lack of soul nor warmth it conveyed. It was not my personal voice, and it did not express my genuine appreciation for the opportunity to impart my insights to thousands of you. You want to hear from me, not some algorithm of me.” So, instead of delivering a lackluster AI-powered speech, the 68-year-old scrapped the draft entirely. “So don’t worry,” he said. “I threw it away and took pencil to paper,” drawing applause from the crowd. Which of course misses the point, because: assistants help on speeches all the time, with varying degrees of mimicing their principal’s own voice, how is an AI research assistant even different in that regard? you get what you prompt, and if he hadn’t fed it content in his voice to learn off of how would it return language that sounded like him?…