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download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. Read previewChatGPT has been acting up in weird ways in recent months. AI models like GPT-4 are continually tweaked and updated, with OpenAI relying on interactions with users to train ChatGPT to become more conversational and useful. It works through a process called reinforcement learning from human feedback , where the AI model learns which responses are more favorable to users and adjusts accordingly. ChatGPT users said the bot was becoming lazyIn recent months, users of the chatbot, which reportedly now has around 1.7 billion users, have been complaining that it has been acting up.
Persons: , OpenAI, James Zou, ChatGPT, Sam Altman, Zou Organizations: Service, Business, Stanford University, Stanford Locations: GPT
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
The Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA) imposes penalties of $1,000 per violation and $5,000 for reckless or intentional violations. The Chamber in a brief filed last year said a ruling against White Castle would spur litigation that could be financially ruinous for some companies. A Chicago-based U.S. appeals court had asked the Illinois Supreme Court to decide the issue. Ohio-based White Castle in a statement provided by a spokesperson said it was disappointed with the ruling and was considering its options. The case is Cothron v. White Castle System Inc, Illinois Supreme Court, No.
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