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Search resuls for: "Buzzy chatbot ChatGPT"


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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is out, the company's board said late Friday. Mira Murati, OpenAI's chief technology officer, will replace Altman as the interim CEO. "A member of OpenAI's leadership team for five years, Mira has played a critical role in OpenAI's evolution into a global AI leader. Murati joined OpenAI as a researcher in 2018 when the company had just 40 to 50 employees, she told Fortune. "Our goal is to get to AGI, and we want to get there in a way that makes sure that AGI goes well for humanity," Murati told Fortune.
Persons: Sam Altman, Mira Murati, Altman, , Mira, OpenAI, PATRICK T, FALLON, Murati, ChatGPT, Tesla, Eugene Gologursky, She's, AGI, Getty, Rainer Maria Rilke Organizations: Service, Albania who's, Murati, Dartmouth, OpenAI, Time Magazine, Radiohead Locations: Albania, Murati, AGI, Silicon Valley, Vancouver
Altimeter Capital Chair and CEO Brad Gerstner is massively bullish on artificial intelligence, saying the power of the advanced technology could even trump the internet. "AI is going to be bigger than the internet, bigger than mobile and bigger than cloud software," Gerstner said at CNBC Delivering Alpha Investor Summit on Thursday in New York. The widely followed tech investor called the rise of AI a "super-cycle" just like the dotcom boom in the late 1990s. Gerstner said he's grown hopeful about the coming years as the Federal Reserve nears the end of its tightening cycle. Learn more about CNBC's Delivering Alpha investor summit here.
Persons: Brad Gerstner, Gerstner, chatbot, he's, we're Organizations: CNBC Delivering Alpha, Nvidia, Federal Reserve, Microsoft, Alpha Locations: New York
"AI is an enormous opportunity," Smith said Tuesday on CNBC's " Squawk on the Street ." The internet was one to start with ... maybe you talk about cryptocurrency blockchain and then you might talk about AI." Smith said AI is an "enormous opportunity" for Salesforce , the software company that he took an activist stake in in 2022. Revenue growth did slow a little bit, which was expected," Smith said of Salesforce. Smith said he's also bullish on software name Splunk , which he said is slightly behind Salesforce in terms of execution.
Persons: Jeff Smith, Smith, blockchain, chatbot, they've, Salesforce, there's, he's Organizations: Nvidia, Ramius Locations: York
Most Wall Street investors believe the best way to take advantage of the artificial intelligence boom is to buy Big Tech stocks, according to the new CNBC Delivering Alpha investor survey. Forty-seven percent of respondents said big-cap tech companies are the best way to invest in AI, while 37% believe there's too much hype around the space. The chipmaker has been at the center of an AI craze on Wall Street. Investors piled into the AI enabler after the company recently made a shockingly strong forecast of future demand. Alphabet's AI capabilities and ambition attracted buying from big investors recently, including Stanley Druckenmiller 's Duquesne Family Office, Dan Loeb's Third Point and Bill Ackman's Pershing Square Capital Management.
Persons: Buzzy chatbot ChatGPT, Stanley Druckenmiller, Dan Loeb's, Bill Ackman's Organizations: Big Tech, CNBC Delivering Alpha, CNBC, Nasdaq, Microsoft, Google, Duquesne Family Office, Bill Ackman's Pershing, Capital Management
Ken Griffin, founder and CEO of Citadel, believes the hype around artificial intelligence could be overblown at this early stage. "I do think the AI community is making a terrible mistake by being full of hype on the near-term implications of generative AI," Griffin said Tuesday during an event for Citadel's new class of interns in Fort Lauderdale, FL. "I think they're actually doing everybody a huge disservice with the level of hype they are creating." One industry that could see a material impact from AI is programming and software engineering, Griffin said. "Programing is going be a big target for generative AI," Griffin said, asked by an intern about AI's impact on his business.
Persons: Ken Griffin, Griffin, chatbot, Warren Buffett Organizations: Citadel, Nvidia, AI Safety, Harvard, MIT, Citadel Securities Locations: Fort Lauderdale , FL, Fort Lauderdale, Palm Beach
Legendary value investor Warren Buffett said he has no expertise in artificial intelligence whatsoever, but thanks to Bill Gates, he took a crack at the buzzy chatbot ChatGPT. "I think it's something I don't understand at all, but Bill did come by about four or five months ago at least. I actually said take the song 'My Way' and write it in Spanish," Buffett told CNBC's Becky Quick on "Squawk Box" Wednesday from Tokyo. Buffett recalled Gates saying one of the limitations of ChatGPT is that it can't tell jokes. "I think this is extraordinary but I don't know if it's beneficial."
OpenAI has launched a subscription tier of ChatGPT where users can pay $20 per month for more reliable services. Management consultancy Bain & Company, has struck a global services partnership with OpenAI, enabling Bain to embed AI in its client operations. Individual users should also have more control over how the AI works, Altman added. "We'll launch more things soon that give users additional control on the system to behave this way or that way." Altman acknowledges the AI system cannot achieve 100% accuracy, and he said he expects applications including AI doctors and AI lawyers to emerge on people's phones soon.
Google announced it developed an AI bot that generates music based on text descriptions. The tech giant is ramping up its AI efforts after issuing a "code red" following the explosion of ChatGPT. In a research paper published Thursday, Google researchers described MusicLM as "a model generating high-fidelity music from text descriptions such as 'a calming violin melody backed by a distorted guitar riff.'" Per the study, identifiable existing songs were found in approximately 1% of examples, pointing to potential copyright infringement. The study also notes the technology's existing limitations, including the use of negations and temporal ordering used in text prompts, as well as vocal quality.
It's in Google's financial interest to present itself as a responsible custodian of AI. On Monday, some of Google's most senior executives, including CEO Sundar Pichai, senior vice president James Manyika, and the chief executive of its AI research unit DeepMind, Demis Hassabis, published an explainer on their approach to AI research, titled "Why we focus on AI (and to what end)." This is a "thinly veiled swipe at OpenAI and ChatGPT", according to a research note from Richard Windsor of Radio Free Mobile. In other words: If ChatGPT and its successors cause widespread havoc, it'll ruin AI adoption for everyone, including Google. There'll be more ChatGPT momentsThere is a flood of money pouring into generative AI startups promising real-world applications.
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