ChatGPT is now more direct and less verbose in its responses: OpenAI
Sam Altman-run OpenAI on Friday said it has made its AI chatbot called ChatGPT more direct and less verbose.
Sam Altman-run OpenAI on Friday said it has made its AI chatbot called ChatGPT more direct and less verbose.
OpenAI's CEO Sam Altman has said that Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk thought that the ChatGPT-maker company would fail and "he chose to part ways".
In a blog post, the ChatGPT maker alleged that Musk wanted “majority equity, initial board control, and to be CEO.”
“Like they say if you can't innovate, litigate and that's what we have here. Elon of old would be building with us to hit the same goal.”
In a setback for Microsoft-backed OpenAI, the US Patent and Trademark Office (PTO) has refused to allow the Sam Altman-run company to register the word GPT (generative pre-trained transformer) as a trademark.
Microsoft, under Nadella, has also acquired several AI companies and invested more than $10 billion into OpenAI, reports The Verge.
Starting in February, ASU will invite submissions from faculty and staff to implement the innovative uses of ChatGPT Enterprise.
The New York Times on Wednesday sued Sam Altman-run OpenAI and Satya Nadella-run Microsoft for copyright infringement.
In the ever-evolving sphere of political campaigning, the emergence of AI-powered tools like Ashley, the virtual campaign volunteer, has sparked both excitement and trepidation in the United States for now, and potentially all democracies later.
Sam Altman, who was reinstated as OpenAI CEO after being abruptly fired last month, has revealed that the development was confusing and chaotic for him and his iPhone had also stopped working.