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 Generative AI


Inside the Studio With an AI-Guided Painting Robot

TIME - Tech

To help illustrate our cover story on how the AI arms race is changing the world, we reached out to award-winning AI artist Pindar Van Arman, who uses artificial intelligence to create his art. Van Arman, who built his first "painting robot" 15 years ago, uses deep learning neural networks, artificial intelligence, feedback loops, and computational creativity to guide his newer robots. As a result, the robots end up making a surprising number of independent aesthetic decisions in the course of painting each piece--putting a different spin on the idea of "generative" AI: artificial intelligence that doesn't just compute, but also creates. "My machines have grown beyond being simple assistants and are now effectively augmenting my own creativity, as well as having creativity of their own," says Van Arman. "They have become a generative AI art system so sophisticated that it has forced me to consider the possibility that all art is generative."


The New AI-Powered Bing Is Threatening Users. That's No Laughing Matter

TIME - Tech

Shortly after Microsoft released its new AI-powered search tool, Bing, to a select group of users in early February, a 23 year-old student from Germany decided to test its limits. It didn't take long for Marvin von Hagen, a former intern at Tesla, to get Bing to reveal a strange alter ego--Sydney--and return what appeared to be a list of rules that the chatbot had been given by its programmers at Microsoft and OpenAI. Sydney, the chatbot said, is an internal codename that is "confidential and permanent," which it is not permitted to reveal to anybody. Von Hagen posted a screenshot of the exchange on Twitter soon after. Five days later, after joking around with friends about what AIs probably thought of each of them, von Hagen decided to ask Bing what it knew about him.


OpenAI to allow users to customise ChatGPT

#artificialintelligence

US-based tech firm OpenAI's generative artificial intelligence (AI) tool, ChatGPT, will soon get an upgrade that would allow users to customise the service to their own needs and preferences, the company confirmed in a blog post on Thursday. While it is unclear as to exactly how these custom versions of ChatGPT would work, OpenAI is looking to add "more diverse views", in order to enable the generative platform to create responses that "other people may strongly disagree with". The upgrade is part of changes to the platform that will see OpenAI's engineers, researchers and reviewers make changes to address issues of bias in its responses. "We believe that AI should be a useful tool for individual people, and thus customisable by each user up to limits defined by society. Therefore, we are developing an upgrade to ChatGPT to allow users to easily customise its behaviour. This will mean allowing system outputs that other people (ourselves included) may strongly disagree with. Striking the right balance here will be challenging -- taking customisation to the extreme would risk enabling malicious uses of our technology and sycophantic AIs that mindlessly amplify people's existing beliefs," the blog post stated.


AI Assistant for WordPress - 10Web

#artificialintelligence

AI Assistant is powered by GPT-3, a revolutionary 175 billion parameter autoregressive language model and other large language models. It uses DALL-E-2 and other models for image generation. Additionally, we use the Davinci model for the text, which is the best model in the market. We also use our own AI technology.


Generative Question-Answering with Long-Term Memory

#artificialintelligence

Generative AI sparked several "wow" moments in 2022. It's hardly surprising that Generative AI is experiencing a boom in interest and innovation [1]. Yet, this marks the just first year of generative AI's widespread adoption. The early days of a new field poised to disrupt how we interact with machines. One of the most thought-provoking use cases belongs to Generative Question-Answering (GQA).


Generative Question Answering with Memory

#artificialintelligence

Generative AI sparked several "wow" moments in 2022. It's hardly surprising that Generative AI is experiencing a boom in interest and innovation [1]. Yet, this marks just the first year of widespread adoption of generative AI: The early days of a new field poised to disrupt how we interact with machines. One of the most thought-provoking use cases belongs to Generative Question- Answering (GQA). Netflix uses your behavior and history on the platform to recommend new TV shows and movies, and Amazon does the same with products [2].


ChatGPT Revolution: Will it impact the security world?

#artificialintelligence

We are sure that by now, you have encountered or even tried the infamous ChatGPT, a very helpful AI-based application. The success of ChatGPT proves the effect of generative AI on today's society. Most people agree that AI-driven chatbots can help save time and funds, yet some think they could threaten various positions. OpenAI, the makers of ChatGPT, have more pessimistic worries. According to them, to avoid things getting worse, AI requires to be controlled and monitored attentively. One of the numerous advantages of ChatGPT is that the AI-driven chatbot can not only analyze codes but can even generate full scripts just by specifying the request.


Can 'we the people' keep AI in check? • TechCrunch

#artificialintelligence

Technologist and researcher Aviv Ovadya isn't sure that generative AI can be governed, but he thinks the most plausible means of keeping it in check might just be entrusting those who will be impacted by AI to collectively decide on the ways to curb it. That means you; it means me. It's the power of large networks of individuals to problem solve faster and more equitably than a small group of individuals might do alone (including, say, in Washington). In Taiwan, for example, civic-minded hackers in 2015 formed a platform -- "virtual Taiwan" -- that "brings together representatives from the public, private and social sectors to debate policy solutions to problems primarily related to the digital economy," as explained in 2019 by Taiwan's digital minister, Audrey Tang in the New York Times. Since then, vTaiwan, as it's known, has tackled dozens of issues by "relying on a mix of online debate and face-to-face discussions with stakeholders," Tang wrote at the time.


Best Use Cases for chatGPT New Language Model - Devops7

#artificialintelligence

ChatGPT, developed by OpenAI, is a cutting-edge language model changing how we interact with technology. With its ability to understand and generate human-like text, ChatGPT has a wide range of potential use cases transforming various industries. In this blog, we'll explore some of the best use cases for ChatGPT and examine how this state-of-the-art model is used to improve processes and revolutionize our work. Here are some of the best use cases for OpenAI's Language Model. One of the most promising use cases for ChatGPT is in customer service.


Threats, mistakes and 'Sydney' -- Microsoft's new AI is acting unhinged

Washington Post - Technology News

Chatbots like Bing have kicked off a major new AI arms race between the biggest tech companies. Though Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook have invested in AI tech for years, it's mostly worked to improve existing products, like search or content-recommendation algorithms. But when the start-up company OpenAI began making public its "generative" AI tools -- including the popular ChatGPT chatbot -- it led competitors to brush away their previous, relatively cautious approaches to the tech.