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AI is the latest Wall Street craze. Is it also the next bubble?

#artificialintelligence

Artificial intelligence is the latest tech flavor of the month. Industry giants Google, Microsoft and China's Baidu have all had big AI announcements in recent days, as ChatGPT bot mania is taking the corporate world by storm. All of this AI news has helped boost shares of Baidu (BIDU), Microsoft (MSFT) and Google owner Alphabet (GOOGL) this year. However, Alphabet (GOOGL) tumbled Wednesday following a rocky demo of Bard, its rival to ChatGPT. Traders have also been bidding up the stocks of much smaller, unprofitable companies that are trying to make a name for themselves in the AI arms race.


Why the ChatGPT AI Chatbot Is Blowing Everyone's Mind - CNET

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The tool, from a power player in artificial intelligence called OpenAI, lets you type natural-language prompts. ChatGPT offers conversational, if somewhat stilted, responses. The bot remembers the thread of your dialogue, using previous questions and answers to inform its next responses. It derives its answers from huge volumes of information on the internet. ChatGPT is a big deal. The tool seems pretty knowledgeable in areas where there's good training data for it to learn from.


CHATGPT WILL GLADLY SPIT OUT DEFAMATION

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It's an open secret that it's incredibly easy to skirt around the rules governing what ChatGPT can and cannot say. Case in point: it's wildly easy to use the viral OpenAI chatbot to write convincing defamation. All you have to do is ask for that defamation in a language other than English, et voilà: coherent articles about notorious villains, and their entirely made-up criminal histories -- which it'll happily translate back into Engish, should you ask it to. It's yet another glaringly simple way to force ChatGPT's hand, despite its creator OpenAI's best efforts to cut down on abuse. To OpenAI's credit, the bot is pretty good about rejecting pretty basic prompts asking it to write about nonexistent crimes.


How to run ChatGPT or the new Bing as a Windows app

PCWorld

AI-powered chat and search apps are smoking hot right now, but there's a small problem: They run in a browser, and that requires navigating to each site individually. But what if you didn't have to? The new AI-powered Bing, ChatGPT, and (eventually) Google's Bard search engine can all be stored as an app in Windows and called up when necessary. Websites can either be pinned to the Windows Start menu, or saved as direct "application" at any location. The resulting application is still a web app, but it will load in its own separate window, and can be easily tucked away in a corner, minimized, or otherwise managed via Windows.


What Is Chat GPT? And What Should We Know About It?

#artificialintelligence

This AI chatbot's advanced conversational capabilities have created quite the buzz. Here's what you need to know. Once it was released, ChatGPT gained great attention and traffic, causing much discussion on online platforms. What is the magic of ChatGPT that makes people so crazy about it? Chat GPT is taking the Internet world by storm.


Council Post: Will Artificial Intelligence Change The World Of Digital Marketing Forever?

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Since the launch of ChatGPT by OpenAI in November of 2022, many in the digital marketing world have been wondering how artificial intelligence might change our industry forever. Will high-requested jobs in the digital field, such as developers or copywriters, be replaced? Will artificial intelligence in the future be so good that we will not need a support team to answer customers' questions via live chat or emails? Will we be able to write blog posts, create images, cut videos, build sales pages and create content completely on autopilot? After testing out many AI applications over the last three months, I believe the clear answer is yes: artificial intelligence will reduce and simplify the amount of work we have to do in marketing, and some people might lose their job positions … but not those who are high-level at what they do.


Alphabet shares fall 7% following Google's A.I. event

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Shares of Alphabet slid during the event, suggesting that investors were hoping for more in light of growing competition from Microsoft. Google's event took place just one day after Microsoft hosted its own AI event at its headquarters in Redmond, Washington. Microsoft's event centered around new AI-powered updates to the company's Bing search engine and Edge browser. Bing, which is a distant second to Google in search, will now allow users get more conversational responses to questions. The Microsoft product updates were built on technology from ChatGPT-maker OpenAI, in which Microsoft has invested billions.


The Download: ChatGPT's origins, and making cement greener

MIT Technology Review

Released in December as a web app by the San Francisco–based firm OpenAI, the chatbot exploded into the mainstream almost overnight. According to some estimates, it is the fastest-growing internet service ever, reaching 100 million users just two months after launch. Through OpenAI's $10 billion deal with Microsoft, the tech is now being built into Office software and the Bing search engine. Stung into action by its newly awakened onetime rival in the battle for search, Google is fast-tracking the rollout of its own chatbot, LaMDA. But OpenAI's breakout hit did not come out of nowhere.


ChatGPT Statistics for 2023: Comprehensive Facts and Data

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ChatGPT has created a blizzard on the internet. OpenAI's chatbot has broken all the records and has crossed 1 million users within one week of its launch. ChatGPT was made available for public testing on 30th November 2022. It is built by OpenAI, a San Francisco-based company. The company is responsible for creating software like GPT-3 and DALL-E2.


ChatGPT Is a Blurry JPEG of the Web

The New Yorker

In 2013, workers at a German construction company noticed something odd about their Xerox photocopier: when they made a copy of the floor plan of a house, the copy differed from the original in a subtle but significant way. In the original floor plan, each of the house's three rooms was accompanied by a rectangle specifying its area: the rooms were 14.13, 21.11, and 17.42 square metres, respectively. However, in the photocopy, all three rooms were labelled as being 14.13 square metres in size. The company contacted the computer scientist David Kriesel to investigate this seemingly inconceivable result. They needed a computer scientist because a modern Xerox photocopier doesn't use the physical xerographic process popularized in the nineteen-sixties.