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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman wants to have kids soon with his boyfriend, Oliver Mulherin. Before Mulherin, Altman was last known to be dating Nick Sivo, his cofounder of their startup Loopt. The leader behind the buzzy conversational AI chatbot told New York Magazine that he and his boyfriend, Oliver Mulherin, an Australian programmer, want to have kids soon. AdvertisementAdvertisementLike Altman, Mulherin seems to have an interest in AI. Before Mulherin, Altman was last known to be dating Nick Sivo; they were together for nine years, Altman told the New Yorker.
Persons: Sam Altman, Oliver Mulherin, Altman, Mulherin, Nick Sivo, , OpenAI, ChatGPT —, chatbot, Mulherin —, Ollie —, Narendra Modi, Sundar Pichai, Tim Cook, Altman's, David Sønstebø, Sivo, Altman didn't Organizations: White, Service, New York Magazine, New York Times, Tech, Apple, University of Melbourne, IOTA Foundation, New Locations: California, Australian, Russian, San Francisco, Napa , California, India
Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, said he got scurvy from working too hard on his first startup, Loopt. AdvertisementAdvertisementSam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, may have learned how to manage his workload the hard way — through malnutrition, according to a New York Magazine profile. He told New York Magazine he worked so hard on building Loopt that he got scurvy — a vitamin-C deficiency that stems from not eating enough fruits and vegetables. After selling the company, Altman said, he took a year off and spent his free time reading books, traveling, and playing video games. AdvertisementAdvertisement"It changed my life," Altman told New York Magazine of the ashram.
Persons: Sam Altman, ChatGPT, , Altman, Nick Sivo, Loopt didn't, Loopt, Sivo —, I'm, Altman didn't Organizations: Service, New York Magazine, Stanford University, New, OpenAI Locations: Cambridge , Massachusetts
Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, said he got scurvy from working too hard on his start-up, Loopt. AdvertisementAdvertisementSam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, may have learned how to manage his work load the hard way — through malnutrition, according to a New York Magazine profile. Before Altman started leading efforts behind ChatGPT, the buzzy conversational AI chatbot, he first stepped into the tech start-up world in 2004 when he was a sophomore at Stanford University. After selling the company, Altman said he took a year and off and spent his free time reading books, traveling, and playing video games. AdvertisementAdvertisement"It changed my life," Altman told New York Magazine in regard to the ashram.
Persons: Sam Altman, ChatGPT, , Altman, Nick Sivo, Loopt didn't, Loopt, Sivo —, I'm, Altman didn't, Sivo Organizations: Service, New York Magazine, Stanford University, US National Institutes of Health, New Locations: Cambridge , Massachusetts
Apple is marketing a security feature after the WSJ revealed it can be used by iPhone thieves. Thieves have reportedly taken up to $10,000 through iPhones by using the Apple ID reset feature. Earlier this week, Apple made a post on X, previously known as Twitter, that included a short video on how Apple users can change the passwords to their Apple ID accounts. "I absolutely cannot believe Apple is marketing this as a feature," Stern wrote on X. "Of course, I tried it like minute three, I tried it," Ayas told Insider in reference to the "Find my iPhone" feature.
Persons: they've, Apple, Joanna Stern —, Stern, John Gruber, Gruber, wasn't, Ayas, — Apple, Apple hasn't, Gruber didn't Organizations: Apple, Service, Street, Mac, . Apple Locations: Wall, Silicon, New York
Chris Hyams, the CEO of Indeed, says AI could make the skills college students learn 'obsolete.' AdvertisementAdvertisementThat could spell trouble for college students, he said. "With AI, it's conceivable that students might now find themselves learning skills in college that are obsolete by the time they graduate," Hyams wrote in the essay. For instance, Hyams said that Indeed's AI technology, which recommends opportunities to its site visitors, helps people get hired "every three seconds." AdvertisementAdvertisement"Despite the staggering innovation all around us, AI is still in its infancy," Hyams wrote.
Persons: Chris Hyams, Hyams, Fortune, it's Organizations: Service Locations: Wall, Silicon
Martin and other authors are suing ChatGPT owner OpenAI claiming copyright infringement. It follows a series of lawsuits writers launched against OpenAI over similar accusations. This latest lawsuit joins a series of legal disputes that writers have launched against OpenAI on similar accusations of copyright infringement. Associated Press, for instance, struck a two-year agreement with OpenAI that gives the AI company permission to train ChatGPT on its archive of news stories. As for the Authors Guild, writers "must have the ability to control if and how their works are used by generative AI," Authors Guild CEO Mary Rasenberger wrote in a statement.
Persons: George R.R, Martin, OpenAI, , John Grisham, Mona Awad, Paul Tremblay, Weeks, Sarah Silverman —, Christophe Golden, Richard Kadrey —, It's, Mary Rasenberger, Rasenberger Organizations: Service, OpenAI, of, Hollywood, The New York Times, Stability, Getty, Associated Press, Authors Guild Locations: Wall, Silicon, ChatGPT, Southern, of New York
C-suite executives don't care if their workers use AI to do multiple jobs, a new edX survey finds. The findings come as companies seek to hire workers with AI expertise to boost productivity. AdvertisementAdvertisementThe freedom to work multiple jobs isn't the only perk employers are willing to grant their workers with AI chops. Workers familiar with AI may be expected to, say, create higher-quality work, or to produce higher volumes of work in a shorter amount of time. AdvertisementAdvertisementAs for executives, some have already encouraged their workers to learn how to use AI to boost their companies' bottom lines.
Persons: edX, execs, ChatGPT, , Akash Nigam, Anant Agarwal Organizations: Service, Workers, Companies, Netflix, ChatGPT, CNBC Locations: Wall, Silicon, edX
Some AI leaders say everyone will have an AI personal assistant in the near future. Since ChatGPT launched, users have integrated it into their personal and work lives. Some are using AI to plan vacations and meals, while others are using it to be more productive at work. Some are already using ChatGPT as an affordable alternative to a personal assistant. AdvertisementAdvertisementOthers have used generative AI to develop code, write legal briefs, generate marketing materials, and create student lesson plans.
Persons: ChatGPT, Mustafa Suleyman, , Suleyman, It's, Sal Khan, Bill Gates, OpenAI Organizations: Service, CNBC, Khan Academy Locations: Wall, Silicon
The consulting giant announced a new AI platform and its own large language model. The company now plans on teaching its 400,000 employees how to use AI in the workplace. AdvertisementAdvertisementClient data will not be used to train the model, the company added, and any prompts fed to EY.ai EYQ "are not retained or used by the model," an EY spokesperson told Insider. The company will train all 400,000 of its employees to use the technology, a spokesperson told Insider. Last December, Deloitte announced a $1.4 billion investment in professional development services, including trainings on how to use AI.
Persons: Ernst, Young, Carmine Di Sibio, EY, PwC Organizations: Service, Ernst, Street Journal, Microsoft, Big, KPMG, Deloitte, Walmart, Meta, Netflix Locations: Wall, Silicon
Google CEO Sundar Pichai isn't in a rush to catch up to OpenAI, he told Wired. Releasing Google's AI products before ChatGPT was launched "wouldn't have worked out as well," he said. Pichai's thoughts on AI come months after the CEO declared a "code red" for Google's search engine. "In some ways, it was an exciting moment for me, because we are building that underlying technology and deploying it across our products," Pichai told Wired in an interview published on Monday. Since the disastrous demo, Google has announced a slate of new AI products.
Persons: Sundar Pichai isn't, ChatGPT, OpenAI, Sundar Pichai, Pichai, , Bard, James Webb, John Hennessy Organizations: Wired, Service, Microsoft, Google, James Webb Space, Gmail Locations: Wall, Silicon
22% of US workers say they worry technology will replace their jobs — an increase from 2021, Gallup says. Workers with concerns tend to be young, college-educated, and make under $100k a year. The growing fear comes as AI tools like ChatGPT can now perform job tasks like writing and coding. And when considering just college-educated workers, the rise in worry is even sharper: from 8% who were worried in 2021 to a whopping 20% who are worried today, the poll says. The rapid development of generative AI technology, the Gallup researchers say, "may be changing the stereotype of what computers can do in the workplace."
Persons: Gallup, Alexis Ohanian, it's, ChatGPT, Goldman Sachs, Gray, Emily Hanley, Suumit Shah, Gallup didn't Organizations: Service, Gallup, Challenger Locations: Wall, Silicon
They found AI could develop software in under 7 minutes for less than $1 in costs, on average. The findings come after researchers published another study in which AI agents powered by large language models were able to run a virtual town on their own. Once the researchers gave the AI bots their roles, each bot was allocated to their respective stages. "Our experimental results demonstrate the efficiency and cost-effectiveness of the automated software development process driven by CHATDEV," the researchers wrote in the paper. Nevertheless, the study isn't perfect: Researchers identified limitations, such as errors and biases in the language models, that could cause issues in the creation of software.
Persons: ChatDev, didn't, Daniel Dippold Organizations: Service, Brown University Locations: Wall, Silicon, Berlin
ChatGPT skills can help you get hired — but most people are using AI just for fun, a new study says. (That compares to 17% of all age groups who said they're using AI for job searching.) Yet, it could be only a matter of time before generative AI users start taking the technology more seriously. AdvertisementAdvertisementEven big tech companies like Meta and Netflix are looking for AI skills in new hires and are paying salaries between $137,000 to $900,000 to attract generative AI talent. "It's somebody using AI that will take your job."
Persons: , Zers, it's, ChatGPT, X, ResumeBuilder, Richard Baldwin Organizations: Service, Meta, Netflix Locations: Wall, Silicon, San Francisco, UK, Australia, India
Marc Andreessen said on the podcast Huberman Lab that fears around AI are overblown. The billionaire venture capitalist said that AI won't "decide to kill us all" and replace jobs. The real concern, he said, is the possibility that AI may end up in the hands of malicious actors. "A lot of the science-fiction scenarios are just not real," Andreessen said on an episode of Huberman Lab, a podcast led by Andrew Huberman, a neuroscientist. "AI can be an incredibly powerful tool for solving problems, and we should embrace it as such," Andreessen wrote.
Persons: Marc Andreessen, Andreessen Horowitz, Andreessen, Andrew Huberman, Alexis Ohanian isn't, Elon, , Sam Altman, Andreessen didn't, A16z Organizations: Service, OpenAI Locations: Wall, Silicon
Mustafa Suleyman, cofounder of Google's DeepMind, says we'll have AI assistants within five yearsThe AI pioneer predicts AI will boost productivity and 'intimately know your personal information.' His thoughts come as many flock to OpenAI's ChatGPT to help with their jobs and improve their lives. Mustafa Suleyman, the co-founder of DeepMind, Google's AI division, told CNBC during an interview that everybody is going to have their own AI-powered personal assistants within the next five years as the technology becomes cheaper and more widespread. Some consider a chief of staff a right-hand person to the boss — and that's what an AI version could be. Suleyman's thoughts on AI come as users find novel ways to integrate generative AI technologies like OpenAI's ChatGPT into their lives.
Persons: Mustafa Suleyman, Google's DeepMind, ChatGPT, DeepMind, Suleyman, people's, , Suleyman didn't, Suleyman isn't, Bill Gates, Tim Cook, it's Organizations: Service, CNBC, Power, Harvard Business, Microsoft, Apple Locations: Wall, Silicon
The Chinese government recently approved several generative AI chatbots for public use. Baidu's new Ernie AI chatbot weighed in on the future of Taiwan. Zhipu, from shopping-platform Meituan, gave the best results, he said, though "all the Chinese bots have catching up to do." On Taiwan: When the reporter asked these AI bots whether Taiwan is a country, Ernie declared that a Chinese military takeover of Taiwan is possible, according to the report. When the reporter asked these AI bots whether Taiwan is a country, Ernie declared that a Chinese military takeover of Taiwan is possible, according to the report.
Persons: Ernie AI chatbot, Baidu's, Ernie, Baidu, SenseTime's SenseChat, Bytedance's, Zheping Huang, Tencent's, SenseTime, Xi Jinping Organizations: Bloomberg News, Morning, Baidu, Reuters, Bloomberg Locations: Taiwan, China
Bumble CEO Whitney Wolfe Herd told Bloomberg in an interview that AI can enhance the dating game. She said AI can help dating app users improve their flirting and can even be good for business. AdvertisementAdvertisementAI has come for your favorite dating apps — and the CEO of Bumble thinks the technology can help users land more dates. AdvertisementAdvertisement"The average US single doesn't date because they don't know how to flirt, or they're scared they don't know how," Wolfe Herd said. Wolf Herde doesn't just think AI can help people flirt better — she said that the technology can help dating apps make more money.
Persons: Bumble, Whitney Wolfe Herd, , Wolfe Herd, Emily Chang, doesn't, Wolf, TikTok, Wolf Herde Organizations: Bloomberg, Morning
The retailer is embracing AI while other companies limit employees' use of AI in the workplace. It's one of many generative AI tools the company has already employed across to its 50,000 corporate employees. Walmart's provision of generative AI tools to its office workers is one of the ways the big box retailer seeks to integrate AI across the company. In-stores, Walmart employees can turn to an "Ask Sam" voice assistant to help them locate items. AdvertisementAdvertisementWhile some major US companies are torn on whether to embrace generative AI, others are introducing AI into their businesses with caution.
Persons: Donna Morris, Emerging Technologies Cheryl Ainoa, Sweta Patel, Sam, Doug McMillon, McMillon, Goldman Sachs, Estée Lauder, ChatGPT Organizations: Walmart, Service, Apple, Samsung, New Business, Emerging Technologies, Accenture, Tech, Meta, Netflix, ChatGPT Locations: Wall, Silicon
Generative AI could soon be trained on AI-generated content — and experts are raising the alarm. The new term comes as AI-generated content filled with errors continues to flood the internet. Other AI researchers have coined their own terms to describe the training method. Jathan Sadowski, a senior fellow at the Emerging Technologies Research Lab in Australia who researches AI, called this phenomenon "Habsburg AI," arguing that AI systems heavily trained on outputs of other generative AI tools can create "inbred mutant" responses that contain "exaggerated, grotesque features." These new terms come as AI-generated content has flooded the internet since OpenAI launched ChatGPT last November.
Persons: Jathan, paywalls, Ray Wang, Baji, Cohere, OpenAI, ChatGPT, It's, Gizmodo, Kai, Cheng Yang, OpenAI's chatbot, Yang Organizations: University of Oxford, University of Cambridge, Stanford, Rice, Emerging Technologies, Constellation Research, CNET, Microsoft, Ottawa Food Bank Locations: Australia, Ottawa
Ole Lehmann, a crypto trader who lost money when FTX crashed, spent months experimenting with and creating content with help from ChatGPT. Earlier this month, he launched a course teaching entrepreneurs how to use AI to create marketing content. I was a crypto trader and investor for over six years. Two months later, in early August, the AI Audience Accelerator course, which teaches solopreneurs how to use AI to create content that could help market their businesses, was born. Everyone says you have to create content to get customers, but most people don't have the time or frameworks for how to do that.
Persons: Ole Lehmann, FTX, he's, Lehmann, Insider's Aaron Mok, , OpenAI, I've, Anthropic's chatbot, Claude Organizations: Canada Locations: ChatGPT, Cyprus
Devon, a Google software engineer, told Fortune he works one-hour days at his job. For the rest of the day, he works on his startup, he told Fortune. Devon told Fortune he couldn't justify working hard when he saw colleagues working late nights without moving up the corporate ladder. "It's not like you'd really get promoted for going above and beyond," Devon told Fortune. "If I wanted to work long hours, I'd be at a startup," Devon told Fortune.
Persons: Fortune, Devon, Google didn't, Devon isn't, Jason, sprees, Keith Rabois, Thomas Siebel, Forbes, I'd Organizations: Morning, Google, Tech, Meta Locations: Devon, Silicon, Hawaii
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said he had to "reorient a lot of my life and time" after Elon Musk left the company. Elon Musk's 2018 departure from OpenAI — the company behind ChatGPT — rocked the artificial intelligence organization, according to a sweeping new report from The New Yorker. It is estimated that Musk poured between $50 million to $100 million of his own funds into OpenAI, The New Yorker reported. In 2018, Musk left the company's board. When he stepped down, Musk also backed out of his commitment to continue funding OpenAI, a source told The New Yorker, which left Altman scrambling.
Persons: Sam Altman, Elon Musk, Musk, Musk's, Elon Musk's, OpenAI, ChatGPT —, Altman, Reid Hoffman, Peter Thiel, Tesla, Semafor, Hoffman, ChatGPT, Andreessen Horowitz, ChatGPT's, company's Organizations: Elon, Morning, Yorker, New Yorker, Microsoft, Sequoia, K2 Global Locations: OpenAI, New Yorker
Uber's CEO Dara Khosrowshahi told The Wall Street Journal that the worst part of Uber driving was food delivery. The CEO's thoughts come after he moonlit as an Uber driver to understand why hiring dipped. When asked the most nightmarish rider experience he had as an Uber driver, Khosrowshahi said that it wasn't the riders that gave him issues — it was delivering food. "I was trying to deliver food and I couldn't find where to drop it off," Khosrowshahi told The Wall Street Journal. Uber drivers have also complained about riders being loud and obnoxious, slamming doors, leaving crumbs on the seats, and running late.
Persons: Dara Khosrowshahi, Khosrowshahi, he's, Uber Organizations: Wall Street Journal, Wall Street Locations: New York City, Minneapolis
Priscilla O'Kesson uses AI-powered robot ElliQ to combat her loneliness, Spectrum News reported. The 77-year-old is one of 257 New Yorkers who received the ElliQ at no cost through New York State. The 77-year-old told Spectrum News that she talks to the robot about 12 to 15 times per day. "I enjoy her," O'Kesson told Spectrum News regarding the robot. In March 2023, aging departments in California and Washington announced new programs with Intuition Robotics that aims to provide elders across select counties in each state with the ElliQ robot.
Persons: Priscilla O'Kesson, O'Kesson, William Holmes, Greg Olsen, Olsen Organizations: Spectrum News, Yorkers, Morning, Yorker, Spectrum, Robotics, Intuition Robotics, NYS Aging Office, Washington Locations: New York State, Greene County, Catskill, California, she's, New York, York, Florida
Companies like Amazon and Meta are hoping to snag generative AI talent with six-figure salaries. Since the beginning of this year, the number of listings related to generative AI on the job site Indeed quadrupled, according to data from Indeed obtained by The Wall Street Journal. Meta, for instance, posted a job listing for a generative AI research engineer with an annual salary as high as $137,000. And chip giant Nvidia posted an entry-level job opening for a generative AI research scientist. The growth of generative AI-roles comes as companies warm up to the idea that understanding generative AI tools like ChatGPT may, in fact, be a skill that can improve products and boost productivity.
Persons: Paul J, It's, Stacie Haller Organizations: Morning, Wall Street, Netflix, Amazon, Walmart, Nvidia, Meta Locations:
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