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An AI engineer says most people don't understand what AI can really do and what it can't, yet. Those working in AI understand when startup claims are realistic and when they're mostly hype. Generative AI is just way, way overhyped right now and that means that many of the AI startups getting VC funding today are going to fail. Today's AI can't really do what so many startups say their apps can do because AI can't reliably predict things. So, how can you tell if an AI startup's technology will work or if it and the company will likely fail?
Persons: OpenAI, I've Organizations: salespeople, Amazon, Costco, Walmart Locations: San Francisco, Seattle , New York
China also urges platforms to “participate in the formulation of international rules and standards” related to generative AI, it said. Generative AI tools like ChatGPT have taken the world by storm. Generative AI refers to the technology that underpins platforms like ChatGPT. In the global race to build guardrails for how governments tap AI, China had gained a significant head start, US Senator Mark Warner warned last month. So far, Baidu, Alibaba and JD.com’s generative AI services are either in the trial stage or being tested by corporate users.
Persons: , Olivier Morin, Mark Warner, Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Cyberspace Administration, Ant, Baidu, Getty, China, Politico’s Global Tech Summit ., ” Citi, National Development, Reform Commission Locations: Hong Kong, China, Beijing, AFP, United States
ChatGPT usage recently fell. If that's the reason, it's a bad sign for OpenAI and AI-powered chatbots. ChatGPT usage has fallen. Churn rates, which measure the percentage of users who stop engaging with a service, have also spiked into the 20% range for ChatGPT, according to Bernstein Research. "This idea that if the ChatGPT drop-off is due to students on summer break, that implies a narrower audience and fewer use cases."
Persons: ChatGPT Bernstein, ChatGPT, Mark Shmulik, Bernstein, Shmulik, It's, chatbots, OpenAI, Garry Tan Organizations: Morning, Bernstein Research, ChatGPT Bernstein Research, Microsoft, Enterprise, insider.com Locations: OpenAI, Silicon Valley
When asked to recount the events of June 4, 1989, the chatbot rebooted itself. On Taiwan, Ernie did not pull any punches:The People’s Liberation Army is ready for battle, will take all necessary measures and is determined to thwart external interference and “Taiwan independence” separatist attempts. According to historical records, Louis XV often uttered this phrase when he ruled France at the end of the 18th century. OpenAI released a plug-in this year that enabled its chatbot to surf the web through Microsoft’s Bing. researchers have used to gauge a chatbot’s human-level intuitions:“Here we have a book, nine eggs, a laptop, a bottle and a nail.
Persons: Ernie, chatbot, Vladimir V, Putin, , ChatGPT, crackdowns, , Louis XV, Jean, Jacques Rousseau, Marie Antoinette, Linda Yaccarino, Jack Dorsey, OpenAI, Microsoft’s Bing Organizations: People’s, Army, Baidu, Twitter Locations: United States, Taiwan, Ukraine, Russian, Russia, France, French
The traditional gatekeepers of knowledge — librarians, journalists and government officials — have largely been replaced by technological gatekeepers — search engines, artificial intelligence chatbots and social media feeds. Whatever their flaws, the old gatekeepers were, at least on paper, beholden to the public. The reforms also require large tech platforms to audit their algorithms to determine how they affect democracy, human rights and the physical and mental health of minors and other users. To hold them accountable, the law also requires large tech platforms like Facebook and Twitter to provide researchers with access to real-time data from their platforms. But there is a crucial element that has yet to be decided by the European Union: whether journalists will get access to any of that data.
Persons: Organizations: European Union, Digital Services, Digital Markets, Big Tech, Facebook, Twitter, European Locations: China, India, European Union
There were 7.6 million open jobs in the U.S. in June, according to the Adzuna database, with a growing share calling for AI skills: 169,045 jobs in the U.S. cited AI needs, and 3,575 called for generative AI work in particular. The average tax manager job that'll use AI pays $100,445 a year, according to Adzuna data. AI jobs have been around for decades but exploded in recent months as ChatGPT entered the scene in late 2022. Companies like EY explicitly listed AI as one of their top three hiring priorities, while Wells Fargo and Kaiser Permanente are implementing it across their workflows. Those interested in building their generative AI skills can look into certification and training courses online, from the University of Michigan, Coursera and other e-learning platforms.
Persons: James Neave, Adzuna's, ChatGPT, Jay Shankar, Neave, Kelly Evans Organizations: Companies, Kaiser Permanente, Amazon Web Services, CNBC, University of Michigan, Stanford, MIT Locations: U.S, Wells Fargo, India
Top AI researchers have been leaving for startups where their work can have more impact. That frustration over Google's slow movement has been corroborated by other former Google researchers who spoke to Insider. Niki Parmar left Google Brain after five years to serve as a cofounder and CTO of Adept, though in November, she left to found a stealth startup. Lukasz Kaiser left Google Brain after working there for more than seven years to join OpenAI in 2021. Sharan Narang, another contributor to the T5 paper, left Google Brain in 2022 after four years there.
Persons: it's, Llion Jones, OpenAI's, ChatGPT, Sundar Pichai, Bard, Daniel De Freitas, Noam Shazeer, Ilya Sutskever, Sutskever, OpenAI, Ashish Vaswani, Niki Parmar, Jakob Uszkoreit, Aidan Gomez, Nick Frosst, Lukasz Kaiser, Kaiser, Illia Polosukhin, Meena, De Freitas, Romal Thoppilan, Character.AI, LaMDA, Elon Musk, Character.ai, Winni Wintermeyer, Thoppilan, Alicia Jin, BERT BERT, BERT, Jacob Devlin, Colin Raffel, Raffel, Sharan Narang, He's, Azalia Mirhoseini, Anna Goldie, Mirhoseini, Goldie, Claude, DeepMind Mustafa Suleyman, Mustafa Suleyman, DeepMind, Suleyman, Reid Hoffman Organizations: Google, Bloomberg, New York Times, Microsoft, Street Journal, Neural Networks, OpenAI, YouTube, Elon, UNC Chapel Hill, Meta, Anthropic, Society Locations: ChatGPT, Character.AI, DeepMind
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailFTC's main concern with A.I. is confirming what is and isn't authentic communication: Rep. Ro KhannaRep. Ro Khanna (D-California) joins 'Last Call' to talk the FTC's investigation into ChatGPT, misinformation on A.I. chatbots and more.
Persons: Ro Khanna Locations: California
Character.AI lets users chat with and create bots based on famous figures throughout history. The app had been downloaded more than 5 million times, according to Bloomberg. Popular figures on the platform include Mario, Elon Musk, and Albert Einstein. One platform, Character.AI, says it's doing things differently from its competitors. For one thing, instead of delivering responses in a consistent voice or a set of pre-programmed personas, users can converse with and create chatbots based on famous figures throughout history.
Persons: Character.AI, Elon Musk, Albert Einstein, Daniel De Freitas, Noam Shazeer, Mario, Micheal Jackson, Tony Stark, Socrates Organizations: Bloomberg, Mario, ChatGPT, Google, Nintendo
Google is making Bard available in Europe, Brazil, and other new territories. Bard is competing with a raft of other chatbots flooding the market, including OpenAI's ChatGPT. Google has announced its Bard AI chatbot is now available in more countries and territories, including Europe and Brazil. The latest expansion makes Bard available in "most of the world" and in the most widely spoken languages, the company said. For example, Bard can now read its responses aloud, a feature that the company said is supported in 40 languages.
Persons: Bard, OpenAI's, chatbot, OpenAI's ChatGPT, Jack Krawczyk, Amarnag Subramanya, it's, Claude Organizations: Google, Morning Locations: Europe, Brazil
Musk and Meta enter the A.I. ringThe rivalry between Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk won’t be confined to social media posts or a cage fight. Meta is further along than Mr. Musk in developing a commercial A.I. The social media giant is set to release an open-source version of its A.I. Well before Meta took a turn into the metaverse, the firm’s programmers developed LLaMA, an A.I.
Persons: Mark Zuckerberg, Elon Musk, Meta, Yann LeCun Organizations: Meta, Microsoft, Google, Financial Times, OpenAI Locations: buzziest
Researchers found popular GPT-detectors flagged essays by non-native English speakers as AI-written. Systems that detect AI-generated writing are flagging essays written by non-native English speakers as bot-generated, researchers from Stanford University said. In the study published Monday, the researchers ran more than 100 essays written by non-native English speakers through seven popular GPT detectors. The researchers also fed the detectors essays written by US eighth graders who speak English natively. More than half of the essays written by non-native English speakers were marked as AI-generated by the detection systems, the Stanford researchers found.
Persons: chatbots, James Zou, Zou, OpenAI, Sam Altman, ChatGPT, Altman Organizations: Systems, Stanford University, Stanford, The New York Times
Google's Bard is trained by contractors who are expected to rapidly review answers, per Bloomberg. Instruction documents showed the contractors were given deadlines as short as three minutes. They work under pressure and are given minimal training, Bloomberg added. Google's Bard is reportedly trained by thousands of contractors under pressure to review answers generated by the AI chatbot in as little as three minutes. However, the workload of humans reviewing responses for Bard has become increasingly larger and more complex, Bloomberg reported, citing internal documents and six contractors.
Persons: Bard, ChatGPT Organizations: Bloomberg, Accenture, Google, Microsoft
A recent article on the "Star Wars" films had numerous errors, The Washington Post reported. The story was one of five articles published using Google's Bard and OpenAI's ChatGPT technologies as the outlet pilots new AI initiatives, a representative of Gizmodo told Insider. These will all be designed to complement our journalism and give our editorial teams new tools to serve our audiences." Gizmodo reporters weren't the only ones angered at the flub — readers, too, expressed their dissatisfaction with the AI creation. At the same time, outlets — including Insider — have announced new initiatives to experiment with AI, with editorial procedures in place meant to prevent errors from being published.
Persons: Gizmodo, James Whitbrook, George Lucas, Whitbrook, Google's Bard, Merrill Brown, Brown, Slack, Claire Lower, LifeHacker, — Brown, Jim Spanfeller, Lea Goldman —, Organizations: Washington Post, Intelligence, GMG Union, Gizmodo, Twitter, NPR
Elon Musk launches his new company, xAI
  + stars: | 2023-07-12 | by ( Hayden Field | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, and owner of Twitter, on Wednesday announced the debut of a new AI company, xAI, with the goal to "understand the true nature of the universe." According to the company's website, Musk and his team will share more information in a live Twitter Spaces chat on Friday. Team members behind xAI are alumni of DeepMind, OpenAI, Google Research, Microsoft Research, Twitter and Tesla, and have worked on projects including DeepMind's AlphaCode and OpenAI's GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 chatbots. Musk seems to be positioning xAI to compete with companies like OpenAI, Google and Anthropic, which are behind leading chatbots like ChatGPT, Bard and Claude. Musk reportedly incorporated xAI in Nevada in March.
Persons: Elon Musk, Musk, DeepMind's AlphaCode, OpenAI's, Bard, Claude, Dan Hendrycks, Greg Yang, Tesla Organizations: SpaceX, Twitter, Wednesday, Team, DeepMind, Google Research, Microsoft Research, Google, The Financial Times, Nvidia, Fox News Channel, Center, AI Safety, xAI, X Corp Locations: San Francisco, Nevada
[1/3] An AI (Artificial Intelligence) sign is seen at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, China July 6, 2023. New rules Chinese firms have to comply with range from algorithm vetting to accepting security reviews of data they want to export. They definitely stifle the innovation and slow down the ability of Chinese firms to catch up." A key motivation behind China's reluctance to release AI chatbots is that Beijing fears uncensored chatbots may start influencing societal views in potentially subversive directions, said Mark Natkin, managing director of research firm Marbridge Consulting. "While the U.S. is racing ahead with AI, China is hitting the brakes with more rules."
Persons: Aly, HONG KONG, OpenAI's ChatGPT, Henry Gao, Ernie Bot, Robin Li, Shi, Mark Natkin, Heatherm Huang, Bard, Microsoft's Bing, Xi Jinping, Baidu, Josh Ye, Brenda Goh, Jamie Freed Organizations: Artificial Intelligence, REUTERS, China, Baidu, HK, Ant Group, Western, Singapore Management University, Microsoft, SenseChat, Nomura, Marbridge Consulting, Huawei Technologies, Thomson Locations: Shanghai, China, HONG, Beijing, Alibaba, Tencent, Hong Kong, U.S
[1/3] An AI (Artificial Intelligence) sign is seen at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai, China July 6, 2023. New rules Chinese firms have to comply with range from algorithm vetting to accepting security reviews of data they want to export. They definitely stifle the innovation and slow down the ability of Chinese firms to catch up." A key motivation behind China's reluctance to release AI chatbots is that Beijing fears uncensored chatbots may start influencing societal views in potentially subversive directions, said Mark Natkin, managing director of research firm Marbridge Consulting. "While the U.S. is racing ahead with AI, China is hitting the brakes with more rules."
Persons: Aly, HONG KONG, OpenAI's ChatGPT, Henry Gao, Ernie Bot, Robin Li, Shi, Mark Natkin, Heatherm Huang, Bard, Microsoft's Bing, Xi Jinping, Baidu, Josh Ye, Brenda Goh, Jamie Freed Organizations: Artificial Intelligence, REUTERS, China, Baidu, HK, Ant Group, Western, Singapore Management University, Microsoft, SenseChat, Nomura, Marbridge Consulting, Huawei Technologies, Thomson Locations: Shanghai, China, HONG, Beijing, Alibaba, Tencent, Hong Kong, U.S
A Berkeley professor said AI developers are "running out of text" to train chatbots at a UN summit. But Russell's insights point toward another potential vulnerability: the shortage of text to train these datasets. A study conducted last November by Epoch, a group of AI researchers, estimated that machine learning datasets will likely deplete all "high-quality language data" before 2026. Language data in "high-quality" sets comes from sources such as "books, news articles, scientific papers, Wikipedia, and filtered web content," according to the study. Russell added that while there are possible explanations for such a purchase, "the natural inference is that there isn't enough high-quality public data left."
Persons: Stuart Russell, Russell, OpenAI, Elon Musk, he's, Sarah Silverman, Mona Awad, Paul Tremblay, Sam Altman, Altman Organizations: UN, University of California, International Telecommunication Union, OpenAI Locations: Berkeley, UN, Abu Dhabi
AI in advertising Amazon is not only differentiating its gen AI strategy by leveraging the cloud, but it's also incorporating AI in e-commerce to support its ad business. Amazon Prime Day Amazon Prime Day, the global shopping event that attracts consumers seeking huge cost-saving deals, on a variety of products will be held July 11 and 12 in 24 countries. Coupled with the cloud, e-commerce is the other big piece of what Amazon is all about. The 48-hour event is expected to bring in $8 billion in U.S. e-commerce sales, according to data by Insider Intelligence. Still, Insider Intelligence data shows Amazon Prime Day e-commerce sales will surpass that of competing retailers.
Persons: Andy Jassy, Scott Devitt, Devitt, Andrew Lipsman, it's, Lipsman, Sellers, Gene Munster, Jim Cramer's, Jim Cramer, Jim Organizations: Amazon Web Services, CNBC, Amazon, Microsoft, Nvidia, AWS, Insider Intelligence, Google, Deepwater Asset Management, Intelligence, Amazon CNBC Locations: U.S
The New York Times Audio app includes podcasts, narrated articles from the newsroom and other publishers, as well as exclusive new shows, which we’re making available to readers for a limited time. Download the New York Times Audio app here. systems are trained on copious amounts of human-generated data and designed to predict the next word in a given sentence. systems that mimic humans, we built those systems to solve some of the most vexing problems facing humanity? [You can listen to this episode of “The Ezra Klein Show” on Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google or wherever you get your podcasts.]
Persons: , Ezra Klein Organizations: New York Times, Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, Google
As Microsoft -backed OpenAI and Google race to develop the most advanced chatbots, powered by generative artificial intelligence, Anthropic is investing heavily to keep up. Just a few months after raising $750 million over two financing rounds, the startup is debuting a new AI chatbot: Claude 2. "We have been focused on businesses, on making Claude as robustly safe as possible," said Daniela Amodei, who co-founded Anthropic with her brother, Dario. Claude 2 will initially only be available to users in the U.S. and U.K., and Anthropic plans to expand availability in the coming months. Since OpenAI introduced ChatGPT to the public late last year, the tech world has invested heavily in the potential of generative AI chatbots, which respond to text prompts with sophisticated and conversational replies.
Persons: Dario Amodei, Kamala Harris, There's, Claude 2, Claude, Anthropic, Daniela Amodei, Dario, we've, OpenAI, ChatGPT, it's Organizations: White, Microsoft, Google Locations: Washington, U.S, paywalls
Is A.I. the Greatest Technology Ever for Making Dumb Jokes?
  + stars: | 2023-07-10 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +12 min
Via Janelle Shane AI Weirdness Generated by A.I. Optimists cite scientific advances and other examples of human intelligence and machine intelligence augmenting each other, robots and people walking hand in hand toward the singularity. possibilities on a two-dimensional plot, where one axis runs from “machine stupidity” to “machine intelligence” and the other from “human stupidity to human intelligence.” Scientific leaps — like physicists’ developing A.I. Machine Intelligence, Human Stupidity Not just any A.I.-generated post deserves to be charted in the Funposting Zone. After all, the machines can keep improving, and human stupidity — the engine of many of history’s best jokes — isn’t going anywhere.
Persons: Overwatch, Spambots, ., Will Smith, Joe Rogan, Harry Potter, Balenciaga, Homer Simpson, Peter Griffin, , Janelle Shane, Janelle Shane ChatGPT’s, ChatGPT’s, Barack Obama’s, , Arik Ahmed, Ahmed, ” Ahmed, ” Mr, Donald J, Joe ”, , Pope Francis, I’d, , “ Will Smith, Elon Musk, Jordan Peterson, ” —, I’m, Harry Potter ”, Mustard, Roddy Ricch, ChatGPT, DALL, Shane, Bing Organizations: A.I, Biology, Balenciaga, Adobe, . Machine Intelligence, Colorado State Fair, Heath, Microsoft Locations: Rome, Ancient Rome, Silicon, dystopia, Funposting, Reddit, Minecraft
Barclays has named several global stocks that are expected to do well as the usage of artificial intelligence-related services evolves. The investment bank acknowledged that hardware and infrastructure giants, most notably Nvidia and Microsoft , are currently seeing the immediate benefits of the AI hype. Still, over the long term, it said businesses in the service sector could cash in significantly. The companies in Barclays' "Global AI Winners" basket include Canada-headquartered Telus and France's Capgemini . The below table highlights non-U.S. stocks in Barclays' basket of AI stocks.
Persons: FactSet, Emmanuel Cau, Capgemini, Goldman Sachs Organizations: Barclays, Nvidia, Microsoft, Telus, France's, Tech, Companies, Tokyo Electron, SoftBank Group, SAP, UK's Sage Group, ASM Locations: Canada, U.S, Taiwan, Tokyo, Europe, Amsterdam
AI chatbots like ChatGPT are based on large language models that are fed a ton of information. Here's how computer science experts explain how the bots know what words to say next. Bots like ChatGPT are also trained on large amounts of conversations that have taught machines how to interact with human users. But watch out for what chatbots don't knowWhat happens when you ask it a question it doesn't know the answer to? That's where chatbots create the most trouble because of an inherent trait — they don't know what they don't know.
Persons: They're, annotators, Kristian Hammond, Northwestern University . Hammond, Richard Harris, Richard Nixon, Hammond, chatbots, it's, William Wang, He's Organizations: Northwestern University ., university's Center, Advancing, Machine Intelligence, University of California Locations: Santa Barbara
Morgan Young was an early adopter of generative AI, which she learned about on social media. I use generative AI for all of these roles, and I find ChatGPT and chatbots to be the most helpful. I started using ChatGPT within the first three days that it came out. AI speeds up the process of researching and pitching to brandsLinkedIn, where I post content about Gen Z, college, and career growth, is my main platform. I've also started using it to improve my outreach for brand partnerships.
Persons: Morgan Young, Young, ChatGPT, I've, I'm, it's Organizations: Service, LinkedIn Locations: Wall, Silicon, Reddit
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