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Search resuls for: "Rishi Bommasani"


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companies have already been sued by authors, artists and media companies accusing them of illegally using copyrighted works to train their A.I. (After all, it’s hard to sue a company for ingesting your art if you don’t know which artworks it ingested.) experts have argued that the more information that A.I. That will give society less time to regulate and slow down A.I., these people say, which could put us all in danger if A.I. The Stanford researchers don’t buy those explanations.
Persons: don’t, , Rishi Bommasani Organizations: A.I, Stanford
Stanford students say interest in generative AI has already surpassed the crypto hype. Now, since OpenAI released ChatGPT in November, interest in AI on campus has surged, more than a dozen Stanford students and faculty told Insider. By the 2022-2023 school year, that number jumped to 140, with 14 courses that specifically touched on "generative AI." Sid SharmaSiddharth Sharma, a sophomore majoring in computer science, said those doubts haven't yet swept through campus. Bryan Chiang, a senior majoring in computer science, recently built an AI-powered monocle called RizzGPT.
Persons: Stanford, OpenAI, Rishi Bommasani, Sophie Fujiwara, Sophie Fuji, Isabelle Levent, Levent, ChatGPT, Ben Margot, Bryant Lin, Lin, Peter Norvig, , Norvig, Siddharth Sharma, Sid Sharma Siddharth Sharma, Bryan Chiang, Chiang Organizations: Morning, Stanford University, Stanford, Big Tech, Google, Yahoo, Stanford Center for Research, brunch, CS 224N, Stanford Daily, Stanford's Institute for, Twitter, Microsoft Locations: Silicon Valley,
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