Large Language Model
Top Chinese tech company unveils its AI challenger to ChatGPT
Fox News Flash top headlines are here. Check out what's clicking on Foxnews.com. A top Chinese company unveiled its challenger to OpenAI's unprecedented ChatGPT on Monday, even as the country's state-run media warns of a potential "AI bubble." SenseTime Group CEO Xu Li introduced SenseChat during a Monday presentation, having the interactive AI tell a story about a cat and answer a series of questions about the story before later asking it to write code, Bloomberg reported. SenseChat is the latest of many generative AIs to be released to the public since ChatGPT broke open the space late last year.
ChatGPT and AI adoption in insurance
The upstart ChatGPT heralded an advent of conversational-AI platforms that can passably converse with humans based on a wide range of inputs. In addition to ChatGPT, which is made by the Microsoft-backed nonprofit OpenAI, other big tech companies are getting into the game with competing projects from Google (Bard) and Facebook (LLaMA). The rise of AI to kitchen-table prominence raises a question: Are insurance companies, which have been transforming digitally for years, ready to invest further in large language models and turn their precious customer relationships over to a chatbot? Forrester Principal Analyst Indranil Bandyopadhyay says that a big AI revolution in insurance isn't going to happen overnight. "I don't see the majority of the insurance industry going and jumping into these emerging technologies. It will take some time," Bandyopadhyay says.
How ChatGPT Can Improve Your ML Models
Generative AI models are all the rage these days thanks in large part to OpenAI and their latest gpt-3 and gpt-4 models. Seemingly everyone has heard of their now famous and shockingly human-like chatgpt interface. Even my grandmother has tried it out and she still has a corded home phone and sends me emails from her @hotmail.com The rapid pace of development around these large language models (LLMs) has been nothing short of incredible. ChatGPT recently broke the record as the fastest-growing consumer application in history, hitting 100 million users in its first two months.
Voters should be 'scared s---less' about 2024 election rigging because of AI: expert
FOX Business correspondent Lydia Hu has the latest on jobs at risk as AI further develops on Americas Newsroom. Advanced artificial intelligence platforms could pose a danger to election security as soon as 2024, with some experts speculating they could become a major source of misinformation. "We should be scared s---less,"Gary Marcus, professor emeritus of cognitive science at New York University and an AI expert, told Fortune last week. The comments come just months after a Twitter account named the Chicago Lakefront News posted a photo of Chicago mayoral candidate Paul Vallas along with a faked recording in which Vallas appears to downplay police shootings by arguing that "in my day" police officers would kill as many as 18 people in their career and "no one would bat an eye." The logos of OpenAI and ChatGPT, taken on Jan. 23, 2023. "This'Defund the Police' rhetoric is going to cause unrest and lawlessness in the city of Chicago.
RSS Data Science and AI Section on LinkedIn: April Newsletter
Our April newsletter is out- packed with all sorts of GPT4 fun and games... as well as news, tips and tricks on data science, machine learning and AI topics in general https://lnkd.in/eAyyTrP8 PS- we've moved to substack- let us know what you think if you get the chance #datascience #ai #machinelearning
The Digital Insider
Mea culpa: I was wrong. The artificial intelligence (AI) singularity is, in fact, here. Whether we like it or not, AI isn't something that will possibly, maybe impact software development in the distant future. No, not every developer is taking advantage of large language models (LLMs) to build or test code. But for those who are, AI is dramatically changing the way they build software.
Study shows ChatGPT accurately provides health advice in 88.25% of cases
A recent study has shed light on the reliability of ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence (AI) language model created by OpenAI, in providing accurate health advice. According to the research published in the journal Radiology, ChatGPT correctly offers health advice 88.25% of the time. Suggesting it could potentially be a helpful tool for individuals seeking health information. They evaluated the AI model's responses to a wide range of health-related questions. It is sourced from medical professionals, internet users, and medical literature.
10 awesomely practical tasks you can do with ChatGPT
ChatGPT, a powerful language model chatbot developed by OpenAI, has revolutionized the way we interact with artificial intelligence. With its advanced natural language processing capabilities, ChatGPT can help you with a wide range of tasks, from answering trivia questions to composing poetry. Here are 10 wonderfully fun, awesomely practical ways to put ChatGPT to work. One interesting thing ChatGPT can do is generate recipes based on user preferences, ingredients, or specific dietary requirements. Give it a starting point by providing certain information about the desired dish, such as the type of cuisine, the main ingredients you want to use, or any dietary restrictions you may have.
'I didn't give permission': Do AI's backers care about data law breaches?
Cutting-edge artificial intelligence systems can help you escape a parking fine, write an academic essay, or fool you into believing Pope Francis is a fashionista. The enormous datasets used to train the latest generation of these AI systems, like those behind ChatGPT and Stable Diffusion, are likely to contain billions of images scraped from the internet, millions of pirated ebooks, the entire proceedings of 16 years of the European parliament and the whole of English-language Wikipedia. But the industry's voracious appetite for big data is starting to cause problems, as regulators and courts around the world crack down on researchers hoovering up content without consent or notice. In response, AI labs are fighting to keep their datasets secret, or even daring regulators to push the issue. In Italy, ChatGPT has been banned from operating after the country's data protection regulator said there was no legal basis to justify the collection and "massive storage" of personal data in order to train the GPT AI.