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Popular AI "ChatGPT" goes paid - Global News Pakistan

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New York, 23 January 2023 (GNP): Microsoft-backed OpenAI has released a paid version of its popular AI software ChatGPT named "ChatGPT Professional." It is now available at $42 per month. The founding company of ChatGPT, OpenAI, announced its plans to monetize ChatGPT a week ago. The upgraded yet'experimental' version of ChatGPT claims to be available during high demand, with no blackout windows, priority access to new features, a faster response rate, no throttling, and increased API request limits. The exact features and pricing of the ChatGPT Professional plan can vary depending on the specific needs of the user and the agreements made with OpenAI.


The Morning After: Microsoft expands 'multibillion dollar' deal with OpenAI, creators of ChatGPT

Engadget

Microsoft is making a "multibillion-dollar" investment that will lead to wider uses of OpenAI's technology, as well as more robust behind-the-scenes support. Microsoft has launched OpenAI-powered features, like natural language programming and a DALL-E 2 graphic design tool. OpenAI uses Microsoft's infrastructure to train its best-known systems, including DALL-E 2 and the popular ChatGPT bot. ChatGPT is coming to Azure soon. However, don't expect anyone to see ChatGPT in Bing โ€“ at least not yet.


OpenAI to Receive Multibillion-Dollar Investment From Microsoft - GovCon Wire

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Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) has agreed to make a multiyear, multibillion dollar investment in OpenAI, creator of artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT, to support the latter's independent AI research and development efforts and enable both companies to commercialize new AI platforms. "We formed our partnership with OpenAI around a shared ambition to responsibly advance cutting-edge AI research


Companies Tap Tech Behind ChatGPT to Make Customer-Service Chatbots Smarter

WSJ.com: WSJD - Technology

ChatGPT, launched by OpenAI in November, quickly went viral for its often elegant, information-packed responses to various questions, gripping the imaginations of regular people, business leaders and investors including Microsoft Corp., which began backing OpenAI in 2019 and said Monday that it would make a multibillion-dollar investment in the startup. OpenAI last week said it would soon add ChatGPT, which stands for chat generative pre-trained transformer, to its application programming interface, or API, which lets developers embed OpenAI technology into their own products. But customer-experience executives said overreliance on such AI models could lead to companies dishing out incorrect information to customers online without knowing they are doing so. While many chatbots are trained to deliver a version of "I don't know" to requests they cannot compute, ChatGPT, for example, is more likely to spout off a response with complete confidence--even if the information is wrong. CMO Today delivers the most important news of the day for media and marketing professionals.


Bill Gates in Australia: Billionaire says AI is coming for white-collar jobs

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Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates has predicted rapid developments in the capability of artificial intelligence programs, such as high-profile tool ChatGPT, will dramatically change the way people source information online, and warned white-collar job losses will inevitably result from its use. Speaking to The Australian Financial Review after an event at the Lowy Institute in Sydney on Monday, the technology pioneer said he had been experimenting with generative AI programs a lot over the past year, and saw huge potential benefits for health and education. Bill Gates appeared at a Sydney event on Monday, before discussing new developments in AI. Microsoft is already an investor in OpenAI, the company behind the GPT-3.5 language system that ChatGPT is based on, as well as Dall-E, which generates images from text prompts, and is in discussions to invest as much as $US10 billion ($14.3 It has been suggested that generative AI could blow open the internet search market that has long been dominated by Google, amid reports that Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin had recently been called back from semi-retirement to hold emergency meetings about how to incorporate chatbots in its search pages.


Microsoft invests $10 billion in ChatGPT maker OpenAI

The Japan Times

Microsoft is investing $10 billion in OpenAI, whose artificial intelligence tool ChatGPT has lit up the internet since its introduction in November, amassing more than a million users within days and touching off a fresh debate over the role of AI in the workplace. The new support, building on $1 billion Microsoft poured into OpenAI in 2019 and another round in 2021, is intended to give Microsoft access to some of the most popular and advanced artificial intelligence systems. Microsoft is competing with Alphabet, Amazon.com. At the same time, OpenAI needs Microsoft's funding and cloud-computing power to crunch massive volumes of data and run the increasingly complex models that allow programs like DALL-E to generate realistic images based on a handful of words, and ChatGPT to create astonishingly human-like conversational text. This could be due to a conflict with your ad-blocking or security software. Please add japantimes.co.jp and piano.io to your list of allowed sites.


Why Microsoft thinks ChatGPT (and not the metaverse) is its bright new future

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Microsoft is making a big bet on artificial intelligence. The company announced "the third phase" of its relationship with OpenAI -- the creators of ChatGPT and Dall-E 2, among other impressive/concerning AI demos -- which includes "a multiyear, multibillion dollar investment" and the commitment that Microsoft will be the exclusive cloud provider for the AI company. Taken on its own, this is a natural extension of pre-existing financial relationship, but in the context of the last two weeks of brutal tech layoffs -- including major cuts to Microsoft's own augmented and virtual reality teams -- it seems as good a signal as any that Microsoft considers offering AI-enabled services to be a much more viable future than the metaverse. Besides cuts to the company's HoloLens mixed-reality hardware team, Microsoft is also sunsetting at least two VR software efforts. First, AltspaceVR, a social VR platform Microsoft acquired when it started dabbling in mixed-reality experiences in 2017, is shutting down in March.


Microsoft invests billions more dollars in OpenAI, extends partnership โ€ข TechCrunch

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Microsoft today said that it's extending its partnership with OpenAI, the startup behind art- and text-generating AI systems like ChatGPT, DALL-E 2 and GPT-3, with a "multi-year, multi-billion-dollar" investment. OpenAI says that the infusion of new capital -- the exact amount of which wasn't disclosed -- will be used to continue its independent research and develop AI that's "safe, useful and powerful." The optics aren't the best for Microsoft, which just last week announced plans to lay off 10,000 employees as a part of broader cost-cutting measures. But they'd been telegraphed by the company earlier this month -- in an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said that Microsoft planned to make OpenAI's foundational systems available as commercials platforms so that any entity in any industry can build on them. OpenAI will remain a capped-profit company as a part of the new investment deal with Microsoft.


OpenAI's ChatGPT is a morally corrupting influence โ€ข The Register

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OpenAI's conversational language model ChatGPT has a lot to say, but is likely to lead you astray if you ask it for moral guidance. Introduced in November, ChatGPT is the latest of several recently released AI models eliciting interest and concern about the commercial and social implications of mechanized content recombination and regurgitation. These include DALL-E, Stable Diffusion, Codex, and GPT-3. While DALL-E and Stable Diffusion have raised eyebrows, funding, and litigation by ingesting art without permission and reconstituting strangely familiar, sometimes evocative imagery on demand, ChatGPT has been answering query prompts with passable coherence. That being the standard for public discourse, pundits have been sufficiently wowed that they foresee some future iteration of an AI-informed chatbot challenging the supremacy of Google Search and do all sorts of other once primarily human labor, such as writing inaccurate financial news or increasing the supply of insecure code.


ChatGPT's killer enterprise use case will be managing knowledge, says EY CTO

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Check out all the on-demand sessions from the Intelligent Security Summit here. Right now there is no "killer" use case for using ChatGPT in the enterprise -- that is, one that will have an enormous impact on the top and the bottom line -- according to EY's global chief technology officer, Nicola Morini Bianzino. But that could soon change: The next six to 12 months will bring an explosion of experimentation, he predicted, especially once companies are able to build on top of ChatGPT using OpenAI's API. And the killer use case that emerges could be around generative AI's impact on knowledge management -- that Bianzino describes as the "dialectic of AI." "Knowledge companies tend to store knowledge in a very flat, two-dimensional way that makes it difficult to access, interact and have a dialogue with," he told VentureBeat in an interview. "We tried 20, 30, 40 years ago to build expert systems. That didn't go really well because they were too rigid. I think this technology promises to overcome a lot of issues that expert systems have."