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AdvertisementPyannoteAI is in talks to raise $10 million in initial funding, sources told Business Insider. The startup's AI platform detects and identifies speakers in audio transcriptions. Voice AI is gaining traction, with startups like ElevenLabs in talks to raise significant funding. A French startup developing voice intelligence models is in talks to raise around $10 million in initial funding, Business Insider has learned from two people with knowledge of the deal. Voice-cloning startup ElevenLabs is looking to raise funding at a $3 billion valuation, Business Insider first reported.
Persons: Lizzie Widhelm, Vincent Molina, Hervé Bredin, Bredin, buzzy, Dealroom, OpenAI, ChatGPT Organizations: Business, BI Locations: France
AdvertisementThe rate of AI model improvement appears to be slowing, but some tech leaders say there is no wall. A fierce debate over whether improvements in AI models have hit their limit has taken hold in recent weeks, forcing several CEOs to respond. Others, including Marc Andreessen, say AI models aren't getting noticeably better and are all converging to perform at roughly similar levels. AdvertisementOne solution that companies are exploring is synthetic data, an artificial form of data generated by AI. Aymeric Zhuo, cofounder and CEO of AI startup Agemo, said that AI reasoning "has been an active area of research," particularly as "the industry faces a data wall."
Persons: Sam Altman, Fabrice Beaulieu Dario Amodei, Anthropic, Jensen Huang, Marc Andreessen, Henri Tilloy, Jensen, Justin Sullivan, Matthew Zeiler, Eric Landau, Landau, Sharon Zhou, Zhou, Daniele Panfilo, Bard, it's, Thomas Wolf, Jonathan Frankle, Ilya Sutskever, Satya Nadella, Aymeric Zhuo, Sivesh Sukumar, OpenAI, Noam Brown, It's, Adam Selipsky, Dario Amodei, Noah Berger, Anthropic's, they've, Microsoft's Copilot Organizations: Nvidia, Business, Google, French VC, Companies, Vox Media, OpenAI, Reuters, TED, Gemini, Web, Getty Companies, Investors Locations: Santa Clara
AdvertisementElon Musk's xAI is reportedly close to unveiling a chatbot app similar to OpenAI's ChatGPT. Elon Musk's xAI is reportedly planning an app that could expand its chatbot's reach to a much wider audience and take on ChatGPT. xAI could release the chatbot app as soon as December, The Wall Street Journal reported on Wednesday. The app, if it materializes, would be another sign that xAI and Musk are trying to take on ChatGPT-maker OpenAI. A chatbot app would be its first product offered directly to consumers.
Persons: xAI, OpenAI, Elon Musk's xAI, Sam Altman, Musk Organizations: Elon, Street Journal, Street, Business, Twitter, Financial Times
OpenAI is allowing employees to sell roughly $1.5 billion worth of shares in a new tender offer to SoftBank, CNBC has learned. Employees will have until Dec. 24 to decide if they want to participate in the new tender offer, which has not previously been reported, one of the people said. The tender offer is not related to OpenAI's potential plans to restructure the firm to a for-profit business, one of the people said. The OpenAI investment matches SoftBank's eagerness to deploy cash, with a capital-intensive business model, a person close to Son told CNBC. The company also received a $4 billion revolving line of credit, bringing its total liquidity to more than $10 billion.
Persons: Masayoshi Son, OpenAI, SoftBank, Son Organizations: CNBC, Employees, Apple, Qualcomm, SoftBank's, Microsoft, Nvidia
By corporate America's (sometimes dubious) telling, AI is basically the answer to everything, including customer service. A recent Gartner survey found that nearly two-thirds of customers prefer that companies don't use AI for customer service. Related storiesEven setting aside the cost savings for companies, there are clear reasons that AI should be a good fit for customer service. "We know that there are certain aspects of customer service that AI is doing well. What's more, if every company has a mediocre AI experience, the bar might just be lowered across the board.
Persons: I've, I'm, It's, it's, Karen, I'd, Michelle Schroeder, don't, Michelle Kinch, that's, aren't, Keith McIntosh, They're, they're, Kinch, Jason Maynard, Chris Filly, Maynard, Jeff Gallino, Rodney Zemmel, they'll, , Gallino, Schroeder, We've, Emily Stewart Organizations: Corporations, Dartmouth's Tuck School of Business, Gartner, Companies, Asia Pacific, FedEx, Fortune, Santander, Siemens, McKinsey, Delta, Filly, Alexa, Business Locations: North America, Asia, Zendesk, Callvu, PolyAI
Agility Robotics is hoping to deploy them across industries like grocery, automotive, and pharma. AdvertisementDigit is Agility Robotics' mobile manipulation humanoid robot. It competes with the likes of Apptronik, which is working with NASA on humanoid robots, and Boston Dynamics, which has created humanoid robots called Atlas that it says can run and jump over obstacles, as well as perform factory-worker tasks. Agility Robotics' humanoid robots are permitted to work only inside a specific, cordoned-off space separate from human workers. Agility Robotics takes a similarly cautious approach to its application of artificial intelligence, which is deep in the hype stage.
Persons: Peggy Johnson, it'd, Johnson, GXO, Ford, , ChatGPT, doesn't Organizations: Robotics, pharma, Silicon, Agility Robotics, Deloitte, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Digit, GXO Logistics, Mobile, Ford Amazon, Agility, NASA, Boston Dynamics, Gallup, Microsoft, Qualcomm Locations: Lisbon
AdvertisementAgility Robotics CEO Peggy Johnson says humanoid robots are filling some labor gaps. AdvertisementDigit is Agility Robotics' mobile manipulation humanoid robot. It competes with the likes of Apptronik, which is working with NASA on humanoid robots, and Boston Dynamics, which has created humanoid robots called Atlas that it says can run and jump over obstacles, as well as perform factory worker tasks. Agility Robotics' humanoid robots are currently only permitted to work inside a specific, cordoned-off space separate from human workers. Agility Robotics takes a similarly cautious approach to its application of artificial intelligence, which is deep in the hype stage.
Persons: Peggy Johnson, it'll, Johnson, GXO, Ford, , Optimus, ChatGPT, doesn't Organizations: Robotics, pharma, Silicon, Agility Robotics, Business, Deloitte, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Digit, GXO Logistics, Mobile, Ford Amazon, Agility, NASA, Boston Dynamics, Gallup, Microsoft, Qualcomm Locations: Lisbon, Portugal
Budgeted salary increases for 2025 across Southeast Asia are expected to be higher than in 2024, according to a new report. As the end of the year approaches, the budgeted salary increases for 2025 across Southeast Asia are projected to be higher than in 2024, according to a November report by professional services firm Aon. For example, Southeast Asia has been "a sandbox environment for a lot of technology companies, i.e. in Singapore, to be setting up shop, so it is attracting capital... and then that creates a demand for talent to serve this growth," Chawla said. Here's how much salary budgets are projected to increase in 2025 across six Southeast Asian countries, according to Aon.
Persons: Rahul Chawla, Chawla, It's, Cheng Wan Hua Organizations: Global, Management, CNBC Locations: Southeast Asia, Aon, Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Asia
AdvertisementTech titan Marc Benioff says we're near the "upper limits" of LLM use in AI advancement. In a podcast, the Salesforce CEO said the future of AI lies in agents that work autonomously. Maybe we'll be there one day," Benioff said, referencing the 1984 film about a cyborg assassin. "I actually think we're hitting the upper limits of the LLMs right now," Benioff said. Salesforce offers prebuilt and customizable AI agents for clients seeking to automate customer service tasks.
Persons: Marc Benioff, Benioff, , Jensen Huang, we'll, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Matthew Broderick, Salesforce Organizations: Bloomberg, Nvidia, Business Locations: LLMs
AdvertisementNvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in a recent interview that today's AI doesn't provide the best answers. "We have to get to a point where the answer that you get, you largely trust," he said. The CEO said we're still "several years away" and that companies will need more computational power. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said today's artificial intelligence doesn't provide the best answers and that the world is still "several years away" from an AI we can "largely trust." During the Saturday interview, Huang said that pre-training or training a model on a large, diverse dataset before it's developed to perform a certain task will not be enough.
Persons: Jensen Huang, we're, Huang, ChatGPT, OpenAI Organizations: Nvidia, Hong Kong University of Science & Technology
NYSEThis report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. What you need to know todayWinning week for marketsMajor U.S. indexes rose on Friday to end the week in the green, despite mega-cap stocks Nvidia and Alphabet shares dropping. [PRO] Interest rates back in focusThis week, the October personal consumption expenditures price index, out Wednesday, will dominate attention. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was 2% higher for the week and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite both climbed around 1.7%.
Persons: GOOG, Donald Trump, Scott Bessent, Bessent, Kevin Warsh, Marc Rowan, Sir Richard Branson, Russell, Sam Stovall, Sundeep Gantori, — CNBC's Pia Singh, Alex Harring, Jesse Pound Organizations: New York Stock Exchange, NYSE, CNBC, U.S, Trump, Treasury, Fed, Anthropic Amazon, COP29, Virgin, U.S . Federal Reserve, Federal, Market, Nvidia, U.S . Department of Justice, Big Tech, Dow Jones, Nasdaq, Super Micro Company, CFRA Research, NVIDIA, UBS Locations: New York City, Anthropic, Azerbaijan
Just seven stocks have fueled much of the market's rally: Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Meta, Nvidia, and Tesla. Move over, Magnificent SevenAfter an incredible two-year rally, it's may be difficult to see the Magnificent Seven cooling off. For context, the Magnificent Seven outperformed the rest of the S&P 500 by 22% so far this year and 63% in 2023. "And so our analysis is there's potential for multiple expansion in those stocks," Kostin added. To find companies likely to see enhanced revenues from AI, Goldman Sachs analyzed recent messaging from company management regarding AI rollout.
Persons: Goldman Sachs, Tesla, David Kostin, Kostin, That's, Goldman Organizations: Microsoft, Meta, Nvidia, Digital Realty
AdvertisementAI leaders are rethinking data-heavy training for large language models. Traditional models scale linearly with data, but this approach may hit a dead end. Now, AI leaders are rethinking the conventional wisdom about how to train large language models. The focus on training data arises from research showing that transformers, the neural networks behind large language models, have a one-to-one relationship with the amount of data they're given. The money going into AI has largely hung on the idea that this scaling law "would hold," Scale AI CEO Alexandr Wang said at the Cerebral Valley conference this week, tech newsletter Command Line reported.
Persons: Alex Voica, Mohamed, Alexandr Wang, It's, Aidan Gomez, Gomez, Richard Socher, we're, Kevin Scott, Waleed Kadous, Uber Organizations: Meta, Google, University of Artificial Intelligence, Command, Microsoft, Sequoia Capital's, OpenAI's o1, o1 Locations: University, ChatGPT, gpt
I found that I was clashing with the culture of Silicon Valley. I attributed that attitude to the Silicon Valley atmosphere. In Silicon Valley, you have a lot of Google people, a lot of Meta people, and, at the time I was there, a lot of Tesla people. An aerial view of Silicon Valley. The sustainability hub is in Silicon Valley, and moving to the other side of the country felt like I was separating myself from that.
Persons: Adam Fletcher, Fletcher, NerdWallet, unravels ChatGPT, I've, They're, we're, It's, There's, Philadelphia Jon Lovette, Philly Organizations: San, Philadelphia, Stanford, Applied Materials, East, Carbon, Carbon Reform, Eagles, Phillies, University of Pennsylvania, Drexel University Locations: San Francisco, East, San Francisco , California, Philadelphia , Pennsylvania, Philly, Philadelphia, Bay, Santa Clara, California, Silicon Valley, Silicon, East Coast, Rittenhouse, New York, DC
The judge used an analogy to a video game company to explain her decision. The New York Times sued OpenAI in December, arguing that the company used its articles without permission to train ChatGPT. She then offered an analogy to explain her decision, comparing OpenAI to a video game manufacturer and the Times to a copyright holder. If a copyright holder sued a video game manufacturer for copyright infringement, the copyright holder might be required to produce documents relating to their interactions with that video game manufacturer, but the video game manufacturer would not be entitled to wide-ranging discovery concerning the copyright holder's employees' gaming history, statements about video games generally, or even their licensing of different content to other video game Manufacturers. The case is one among dozens of copyright cases filed against OpenAI, including by media organizations like the New York Daily News, the Denver Post, and The Intercept.
Persons: OpenAI, Ona T, Wang, Sarah Silverman, Silverman, Rob Lowe, that's, Axel Springer Organizations: Times, New York Times, OpenAI, New York Daily News, Denver Post, Raw, Business
Amazon on Friday announced it would invest an additional $4 billion in Anthropic, the artificial intelligence startup founded by ex-OpenAI research executives. Anthropic is the company behind Claude — one of the chatbots that, like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini, has exploded in popularity. In March, Amazon’s $2.75 billion investment in Anthropic was the company’s largest outside investment in its three-decade history. The companies announced an initial $1.25 billion investment in September 2023. In September, Anthropic rolled out Claude Enterprise, its biggest new product since its chatbot’s debut, designed for businesses looking to integrate Anthropic’s AI.
Persons: Claude chatbot, Claude —, Claude, It’s, Anthropic, Jared Kaplan, Kaplan, Claude Enterprise Organizations: Microsoft, Meta, AWS, Amazon’s, CNBC, Google Locations: Anthropic, Amazon, San Francisco
The browser would be integrated with ChatGPT, according to the report. OpenAI is eyeing two territories that have long been dominated by Google, according to a report from The Information: web browsing and search. As of August, Google Chrome held about 65% of the global web browser market share, according to Statista, a data analytics firm. And as of January, Google Search accounted for about 82% of the global search engine market share. OpenAI already has positioned ChatGPT as a search engine rival with the release of ChatGPT search in October.
Persons: OpenAI's ChatGPT, OpenAI, Ben Goodger, Department's Organizations: ChatGPT, Google, Chrome, DOJ
In the emerging AI software battle between Microsoft and Salesforce , investors do not need to pick a side. The announcements came roughly one year after the tech giant launched a suite of AI assistant tools called Microsoft 365 Copilot. Both companies leaning into AI agents is notable because Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff has not been hesitant to attack Microsoft's competing AI offerings. Salesforce stock is up 28% year to date versus Microsoft's roughly 9% gain since the start of 2024. I don't want to go against Microsoft," Jim said.
Persons: Jim Cramer, , Marc Benioff, Benioff, who's, Satya Nadella, Nadella, They're, We've, Salesforce, Slack, Agentforce, Jim, it's, Jim Cramer's, Salesforce's Dreamforce, Justin Sullivan Organizations: Microsoft, Deutsche Bank, Club, CNBC, Getty Locations: Agentforce, Salesforce's, Mulesoft, San Francisco , California
Amazon on Friday announced it would invest an additional $4 billion in Anthropic, the artificial intelligence startup founded by ex-OpenAI research executives. Anthropic is the company behind Claude — one of the chatbots that, like OpenAI's ChatGPT and Google's Gemini, has exploded in popularity. In March, Amazon's $2.75 billion investment in Anthropic was the company's largest outside investment in its three-decade history. The companies announced an initial $1.25 billion investment in September 2023. In September, Anthropic rolled out Claude Enterprise, its biggest new product since its chatbot's debut, designed for businesses looking to integrate Anthropic's AI.
Persons: Claude chatbot, Claude —, Claude, It's, Anthropic, Jared Kaplan, Kaplan, Claude Enterprise Organizations: Microsoft, Meta, AWS, Amazon's, CNBC, Google Locations: Anthropic, Amazon, San Francisco
Some major tech companies including Meta are taking steps to combat “pig butchering” scams, which trick Americans out of billions of dollars each year through fake online friendships and romances. Pig butchering scams are elaborate and often take months to unfold. Meta on Thursday announced it has taken its first major steps into addressing the scams, including dedicating staff to identify where scammers operate, sharing that information with international law enforcement, and taking down more than 2 million accounts this year. The announcement reflects how more tech companies are recognizing the severity of pig butchering scams. Calling themselves the Tech Against Scams coalition, the companies pledged to share scammer information with each other and better educate users.
Persons: they’ve, Meta, Jeff Lunglhofer, , Jake Sims, Operation Shamrock, , ” Sims Organizations: Meta, Facebook, FBI, Tech, NBC News Locations: WhatsApp, France, Cambodia, OpenAI
Silverman discussed her copyright infringement lawsuit against OpenAI, which owns ChatGPT. Comedian Sarah Silverman opened up about her copyright infringement lawsuit against Sam Altman's OpenAI, which owns the artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT. The lawsuit's defendants include OpenAI, L.P. and OpenAI GP, L.L.C, among other entities. The plaintiffs originally sued OpenAI for direct copyright infringement, vicarious copyright infringement, violating The Digital Millennium Copyright Act, unjust enrichment, violating the California and common law unfair competition laws, and negligence. The judge dismissed all the claims except direct copyright infringement and unfair competition, prompting the plaintiffs to file an amended lawsuit in March.
Persons: Sarah Silverman, Rob Lowe's, Silverman, Sam Altman's OpenAI, ChatGPT, Rob Lowe, OpenAI, Sam Altman, Nehisi Coates, Laura Lippman, Paul Tremblay, Jason Redmond, It's, Lowe, that's Organizations: Rob Lowe's Sirius XM, OpenAI, Microsoft, Court, Northern District of, Northern District of California San Francisco Division, Business, Copyright Locations: Northern District, Northern District of California, AFP, California
BEIJING — Chinese tech giant Baidu on Thursday posted a 3% annual drop in third-quarter revenue, nevertheless beating market expectations amid AI cloud growth. Baidu noted a 12% surge in its non-online marketing revenue to the equivalent of $1.1 billion, mainly driven by its artificial intelligence cloud business. Beijing-based Baidu operates one of the major web browser search engines in China, along with a frequently used maps app. Baidu has promoted its Ernie chatbot as a local alternative to OpenAI's ChatGPT, which isn't available in China. "AI Cloud continued to show healthy and sustainable development in the third quarter," he said in the earnings release.
Persons: Robin Li, Ernie, Baidu, Ernie chatbot, Li, Baidu hasn't, Rong Luo, Apollo Organizations: Baidu, CNBC Locations: BEIJING, U.S, Beijing, China
Professor Yoshua Bengio, at the One Young World Summit in Montreal, Canada, on Friday, Sept. 20, 2024Famed computer scientist Yoshua Bengio — an artificial intelligence pioneer — has warned of the nascent technology's potential negative effects on society and called for more research to mitigate its risks. Machines could soon have most of the cognitive abilities of humans, he said — artificial general intelligence (AGI) is a type of AI technology that aims to equal or better human intellect. Yoshua Bengio Head of the Montreal Institute for Learning AlgorithmsSuch outcomes are possible within decades, he said. There are arguments to suggest that the way AI machines are currently being trained "would lead to systems that turn against humans," Bengio said. Yoshua Bengio Head of the Montreal Institute for Learning AlgorithmsCompanies developing AI must also be liable for their actions, according to the computer scientist.
Persons: Yoshua Bengio, , Bengio, CNBC's Tania Bryer, That's, we're, OpenAIhas, It’s, Yoshua, — that's, OpenAI Organizations: Young, Summit, University of Montreal, Montreal Institute, Machines, Intelligence, CNBC, Learning Locations: Montreal, Canada, AGI, U.S, Rwanda, Swiss
California Governor Gavin Newsom vetoed California's bill at the end of September but signed into law another bill which requires transparency in generative AI systems. "A lot of the privacy risks associated with AI can be tackled through a comprehensive data privacy regime," she said. The U.S. has historically approached data privacy with decentralized, state-by-state legislation, which is where AI regulation is currently headed. Regarding Colorado's successful AI bill, Maroney wrote on Facebook, "It is unfortunate that Connecticut chose not to join Colorado as a leader in this space. Even a model approach, if done wrong, could pose a major risk to the U.S. "Everybody's looking at California, especially when it comes to tech," Elgendy said.
Persons: Scott Weiner, Wiener, Gavin Newsom, California's, Tatiana Rice, Jonas Jacobi, Mohamed Elgendy, Elgendy, Rice, Robert Rodriguez, James Maroney, Maroney Organizations: Conference, AI Alliance, Washington D.C, U.S ., European Union AI, Privacy, Data, American, White, Office of Science, Technology, Democratic, Colorado Senate, Democratic Connecticut State, Facebook, Colorado Locations: California, San Francisco, Washington, Puerto Rico, U.S, U.S . Virgin Islands, Colorado, Silicon, Connecticut
AdvertisementOpenAI shifted away from being a nonprofit to attract more capital, says CEO Sam Altman. OpenAI needed more funding to scale its AI research efforts, he said in a recent interview. OpenAI's $6.6 billion funding round came with some strings attached: it has 2 years to become a for-profit entity. Altman said that scaling its AI models was a major factor in OpenAI's eventual move toward a profit system. Scaling AI models and providing the data centers and chips necessary to train them to be smarter than the previous interaction is highly expensive.
Persons: OpenAI, Sam Altman, Elon Musk, Altman, OpenAI's, Organizations: Harvard Business School, Harvard
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