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+19 +1
AI chatbots lose money every time you use them. That’s a problem.
The sheer expense of operating AI chatbots could throttle the AI boom.
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+18 +1
ChatGPT Is Cutting Non-English Languages Out of the AI Revolution
AI chatbots are less fluent in languages other than English, threatening to amplify existing bias in global commerce and innovation.
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+20 +1
Using Redis VSS in a Large Language Model Chain
Use Redis VSS in an LLM chain with Relevance AI, Redis VSS, OpenAI GPT, and Cohere Wikipedia embeddings for data retrieval and context.
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+17 +1
No ChatGPT in my court: Judge orders all AI-generated content must be declared and checked
Few lawyers are foolish enough to let AI make their arguments, but one did, and this judge is making sure that doesn't happen in his court.
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Question+1 +1
What is Chat GPT 3 ChatBot
GPT-3 Chatbots are based on pre-trained models and do not possess true understanding or consciousness. They rely on pattern recognition and statistical analysis to generate responses. While they can produce impressive and coherent text, there may be instances where the generated content lacks accuracy or context. GPT-3 Chatbots have gained popularity due to their ability to generate human-like conversations and their potential to automate customer interactions, improve user experience, and provide on-demand assistance. As the technology continues to advance, GPT-3 Chatbots are likely to become even more sophisticated, enabling more seamless
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+28 +1
Open Source AI: Forget ChatGPT & Bard, The Future of AI Lies With Models like LLaMA
Delve into world of open source AI with models like LLaMA that are pushing boundaries and redefining the future of AI technology. Discover how open source is eclipsing previous models like ChatGPT and Bard, and how their accessible, collaborative nature is driving unparalleled innovation and progress in the field
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+24 +1
Composing Music with ChatGPT - An Inspiration or a Threat to the Musicians
The landscape of music composition, once predominantly traditional and manual, is currently undergoing a transformative process through the intervention of state-of-the-art technology. Along with the torchbearer in this evolutionary transition — the Google’s MusicML, there is none other than OpenAI’s artificial intelligence (AI) model, ChatGPT.
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+27 +1
ChatGPT just launched on your iPhone and Siri should be very scared
OpenAI launches ChatGPT on iOS and we tried it out
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+14 +1
Dark Web ChatGPT Unleashed: Meet DarkBERT
We're still early in the snowball effect unleashed by the release of Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT into the wild. Paired with the open-sourcing of other GPT (Generative Pre-Trained Transformer) models, the number of applications employing AI is exploding; and as we know, ChatGPT itself can be used to create highly advanced malware.
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+19 +1
ChatGPT Scams Are Infiltrating the App Store and Google Play
An explosion of interest in OpenAI’s sophisticated chatbot means a proliferation of “fleeceware” apps that trick users with sneaky in-app subscriptions.
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+29 +1
A Texas professor failed more than half of his class after ChatGPT falsely claimed it wrote their papers
Some seniors at Texas A&M were denied their diplomas because their professor claimed they used AI software to cheat on their essays.
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+26 +1
"I'm making thousands using AI to write books"
This approach has been successful. I have an unprecedented rate of production.
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+12 +1
Ministers not doing enough to control AI, says UK professor
One of the professors at the forefront of artificial intelligence has said ministers are not doing enough to protect against the dangers of super-intelligent machines in the future.
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+27 +1
Chinese authorities arrest ChatGPT user for generating fake news
Hong allegedly used it to falsely report a fatal train crash.
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+18 +1
Can AI write 'Ted Lasso'? Writers strike may open door to ChatGPT-written scripts.
A long Hollywood writers strike may make movie and TV studios more likely to take a risk on AI-generated or AI-co-generated content.
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+21 +1
Computer scientists ‘should require licences to develop AI’
Scientists should have licences to be allowed to develop AI products, the professional body for tech workers has urged. Rashik Parmar, chief executive of British Computer Society (BCS), the chartered institute for IT staff, made his comments after the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) launched a review into the AI market.
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+25 +1
ChatGPT can pick stocks better than your fund manager
A basket of stocks selected by ChatGPT, a chatbot powered by artificial intelligence (AI), has far outperformed some of the most popular investment funds in the United Kingdom. Between March 6 and April 28, a dummy portfolio of 38 stocks gained 4.9 per cent while 10 leading investment funds clocked an average loss of 0.8 per cent, according to an experiment conducted by financial comparison site finder.com.
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+18 +1
Rise of artificial intelligence is inevitable but should not be feared, ‘father of AI’ says
The man once described as the father of artificial intelligence is breaking ranks with many of his contemporaries who are fearful of the AI arms race, saying what is coming is inevitable and we should learn to embrace it. Prof Jürgen Schmidhuber’s work on neural networks in the 1990s was developed into language-processing models that went on to be used in technologies such as Google Translate and Apple’s Siri. The New York Times in 2016 said when AI matures it might call Schmidhuber “Dad”.
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+22 +1
OpenAI’s regulatory woes have barely started
Italy’s GDPR restrictions were just a taste of what lies ahead for ChatGPT.
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+17 +1
Businesses are automating slower than expected, says report
Businesses globally have introduced automation into their operations at a slower pace than previously anticipated, the World Economic Forum (WEF) opined this week. The org's annual Future of Jobs report said businesses currently estimate 34 percent of all their tasks are completed by machines – a trajectory that would see its 2020 prediction of 47 percent automation by 2025 fall short. The org has therefore adjusted its prediction and now guesstimates 42 percent of tasks will be automated by 2027.
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