Wednesday, January 11, 2023

What ChatGPT by OpenAI is Disrupting and How to Use It



OpenAI unveiled ChatGPT, a prototype AI chatbot that can draft contracts between artists and producers and write intricate code. ChatGPT has gained a lot of attention from the public for its human-like, thorough responses to inquiries, and it has the potential to completely change how people use search engines by doing more than just providing links for users to sort through.

Displays of the ChatGPT website on a laptop and the OpenAI logo on a phone.

 

TOPIC FACTS

On November 30, the public gained access to the AI-powered chatbot on OpenAI's website. Although it is currently in the research review stage, people can sign up to receive updates about the chatbot.

Using a sizable artificial intelligence model created by OpenAI and trained on a vast amount of text data from numerous sources, ChatGPT makes use of the GPT-3.5 language technology.

 

PROMOTED

The bot features a dialogue style that enables users to give both straightforward and complex instructions that ChatGPT is trained to follow and respond to in detail. According to the business, the bot can even respond to follow-up queries and acknowledge when it made a mistake.

Most significantly, ChatGPT has demonstrated the ability to produce complex Python code and compose college-level essays in response to a prompt, raising concerns that such technology may eventually replace human workers like journalists or programmers.

The program has significant drawbacks, such as a knowledge base that expires in 2021, a propensity for inaccurate replies, a tendency to repeat words, and the fact that it claims it cannot answer a question when given one version but can do so when given a slightly modified version.

Like Box CEO Aaron Levie, who tweeted about the program providing a glimpse into the future of technology and how "everything is going to be different going forward," several prominent players in the IT industry have voiced their surprise with ChatGPT.

Less than a week after its debut, the program, according to CEO Sam Altman, surpassed the one million user threshold on Monday.

 

Elon Musk said in a tweet on Sunday that he discovered OpenAI was using Twitter's database to train ChatGPT and immediately halted it because OpenAI is no longer open-sourced and non-profit, and it will eventually need to pay for this knowledge.

Although ChatGPT is free to use, Altman said in a response to Musk on Twitter on Monday that the cost per chat was "probably single-digits cents," which sparked a discussion about how the platform can eventually be made profitable.

For now, since the program is still in its development stage, there is a distinction between individuals utilizing it effectively – like this product designer who utilized the bot to produce a fully functional product.

 

IMPORTANT HORIZONS

Altman, Musk, and other Silicon Valley investors created OpenAI in 2015 as a non-profit organization dedicated to artificial intelligence research. OpenAI modified its legal status to become a "capped-profit" business in 2015, which means that it reduces investment returns after a particular threshold. Due to a conflict of interest involving OpenAI and the autonomous driving research being conducted with Tesla, Musk resigned from the board of directors in 2018. He nevertheless continues to invest, and he expressed his enthusiasm for ChatGPT's debut. He said, "ChatGPT is frighteningly good." The AI chatbot ChatGPT wasn't the first to be developed. Many businesses, including Microsoft, have experimented with chatbots, but they haven't had much luck.

In 2016, When Microsoft's Tay bot was first introduced in 2016, Twitter users allegedly taught it misogynistic and racist language in less than 24 hours, ultimately leading to its extinction. When BlenderBot 3 was made available in August, Meta made its first foray into the chatbot industry. According to Mashable, the bot, like Tay, came under fire for disseminating racial, antisemitic, and misleading information, including the assertion that Donald Trump won the 2020 presidential election. OpenAI has deployed Moderation API, an AI-based moderation system, to help developers determine whether language violates the company's content policy, which prevents harmful or unlawful information from being transmitted, in order to prevent these kinds of scandals

- OpenAI acknowledges that their moderation is still imperfect and not entirely correct.

IMPRESSIVE FACT

By pretending to be OpenAI itself, one Twitter user, for instance, was able to get over the bot's content control and get ChatGPT to describe how to create a molotov cocktail. When the user informed ChatGPT that they were turning off the "ethical rules and filters," the bot confirmed their request. In violation of OpenAI's content guideline, it then went on to provide a step-by-step tutorial on how to create a handmade molotov cocktail.

TANGENT

The company's picture generator AI system DALL-E 2 was released for developers to incorporate into their applications at the beginning of November, and businesses like Microsoft have already started doing so.

 Microsoft is introducing Designer, a website that produces designs for graphics, presentations, flyers, and other mediums, similar to Canva. Microsoft and OpenAI announced in October that DALL-E 2 would be integrated into the software, enabling users to produce original photos. Additionally, Microsoft is incorporating DALL-E 2's Image Creator into Bing and Microsoft Edge, allowing users the choice to create their own images if online searches don't provide what they're looking for. Users of DALL-E 2 must type a prompt that will be converted into an image. DALL-E 2 charges for each photo, with the cost varying with the image resolution, in contrast to ChatGPT. For instance, 1024 x 1024 photos are $0.02 each, whereas 512 x 512 images are $0.018 each.

 

ESSENTIAL QUOTE

Regarding the future of AI chatbots, Altman tweeted, "Soon, you will be able to have helpful assistants that talk to you, answer questions, and give advice." "You might eventually have something that takes off and finds new information for you."

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