"Personally, I would never put any of my personal information, especially health, psychological information, into one of these large language models that's just hoovering up an absolute tonne of data, and you're not entirely sure how it's being used, what you're consenting to."
Project Zulu arranges for choirs from South African townships to tour the UK every two years.Mr Knight said UWE students studying professions such as teaching, engineering and occupational therapy were sent out to the township in South Africa annually to "spend a few weeks making valuable contributions to the educational life of schools in the township".
Then every two years a choir, made up of children from two partnership schools, are brought over to Bristol to spend three weeks performing and sharing their talent and culture."They've been busking, they've put on concerts," he said.Mr Knight explained the tour aimed to raise money for the two schools involved.
"They are over here sharing their extraordinary talents and culture but also earning money to develop their educational opportunities back home," he said.He said this year, one school planned to use the money to develop solar energy and the other hoped to buy IT equipment.
"Every penny that is made goes directly back to their schools," he said.
"A little bit of your money goes a really long way in South Africa," he added."Many men fought, some until their last breath, to defend the Malian nation," the statement added.
An unnamed local source told Reuters that JNIM had left many casualties and "cleared the camp".The attacks, the latest sign of collapsing security in Mali and the wider Sahel region, came after the United States Africa Command warned about growing efforts by various different Islamist militant groups which operate in the Sahel to gain access to West Africa's coastline.
During a press conference on Friday, the commander of United States Africa Command (Africom), Gen Michael Langley, described recent attacks in Nigeria, the wider Sahel, and the Lake Chad Basin as deeply troubling, warning that the groups' access to the coast would significantly boost their capacity for smuggling and arms trafficking.It is thought that more than 400 soldiers have been killed by militants since the beginning of last month in Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger, Reuters reports.