Large Language Model
DeepMind AI is as fast as humans at solving previously unseen tasks
DeepMind has developed an artificial intelligence that can solve tasks it has never seen before as fast and as accurately as humans โ it could be a step towards generally intelligent AI that could master an array of jobs in the real world. The AI, called Adaptive Agent or AdA, works in a 3D virtual world where it is asked to solve tasks that involve navigating, planning and manipulating objects. Humans are excellent at solving new problems in very different environments, including ones they haven't seen before.
Could ChatGPT do my job?
So far, newsrooms have pursued two very different approaches to integrating the buzziest new AI tool, ChatGPT, into their work. Tech news site CNET secretly started using ChatGPT to write entire articles, only for the experiment to go up in flames. It ultimately had to issue corrections amid accusations of plagiarism. Buzzfeed, on the other hand, has taken a more careful, measured approach. Its leaders want to use ChatGPT to generate quiz answers, guided by journalists who create the topics and questions.
Buzzfeed and Microsoft lead the charge as AI replaces jobs
We may be witnessing an inflection point with artificial intelligence (AI), notably OpenAI's GPT large language model replacing jobs through automation. Last week the news and entertainment company BuzzFeed Inc (NASDAQ: BZFD) said it would use the GPT-3 engine to create quizzes and other content targeted towards teenagers and young adults, which sent its stock price soaring over 300%. The company is struggling to remain relevant, and laid off 12% of its staff in the wake of a US$27 million loss in the third quarter. But BuzzFeed was not the first major company to come up with the idea of replacing its staff through automation. Microsoft (NASDAQ: MSFT) fired over 50 of its editors and journalists that curated content for its Microsoft News and MSN news portals.
Will ChatGPT Unflip the Classroom? - Education Next
ChatGPT has occasioned a lot of hand-wringing, cheering, and philosophizing. Some have predicted "The End of High School English." Others have been enthusiastic to use it as a wonderful new teaching tool. But, through it all, I've been struck by the inattention to one very practical question: Is ChatGPT going to unflip the classroom? First, to be safe, I should quickly clarify two things.
AI-enabled executives: how ChatGPT will sharpen strategic thinking - I by IMD
Strategic thinking has long been viewed as essential for leaders of organizations. The ability to anticipate and plan for the future, to think critically and creatively about complex problems, and make effective decisions in the face of uncertainty and change is more necessary than ever. These capabilities will be dramatically augmented and magnified by artificial intelligence systems such as ChatGPT. With the ability to process large amounts of data, identify patterns, and make predictions, AI will provide fresh insights and perspectives that were previously unavailable to company executives. This will enable them to make more informed and accurate decisions โ and to anticipate and plan for the future more effectively.
Developed Artificial Intelligence Detecting ChatGPT: DetectGPT
OpenAI's viral artificial intelligence chatbot ChatGPT has started to be used in almost every field. However, the researchers announced DetectGPT, which can detect ChatGPT. Although we are still at the beginning of 2023, we can already see that artificial intelligence will be the trend of this year. On the other hand, OpenAI's ChatGPT product, which has become viral, remains on the agenda. There were even those who passed their college exams and assignments using ChatGPT.
How may ChatGPT AI disrupt the NHS?
ChatGPT, the AI-driven chatbot that produces remarkable results from simple queries, has been the sensation of the tech world over the past few months, since launching in November. And unless you've been living in a cave without wifi you are likely to have read a flurry of articles on what impact it may have. Some people believe it marks a technology inflection point; and points to the redefining of many knowledge jobs, beginning with lawyers, journalists, marketers, teachers, lecturers, software coders and possibly even doctors. Others have speculated that it points to a post-Google world, leapfrogging the familiar search paradigm of the past 20 years, or will transform personal business and productivity tools so that emails, spreadsheets, reports and even software may all be generated by AI tools. GPT-3, or Generative Pre-trained Transformer, from San Francisco start-up OpenAI, is a type of artificial intelligence that has the unerring ability to generate remarkably human-like text, from a short query or input text.
ChatSonic - Like ChatGPT but with superpowers
ChatGPT is an open-source conversational AI system created by OpenAI, founded by Sam Altman. It is powered by a neural network that has been trained on millions of conversations. It is designed to understand natural language and respond in a meaningful way. The system is based on the GPT-3 model, which is a large-scale language model developed by OpenAI that has been trained on hundreds of billions of words from the internet. The model is used to generate text responses to user input in a conversational manner.
ChatGPT Crowns Clarence Thomas As Champion Of Gay Rights In Feedback Loop Of Stupid - Above the LawAbove the Law
Everyone is chattering about ChatGPT. Can it pass the bar exam? No, though it performs well on some sections. Which should force a serious reevaluation of the test's ultimate value to the profession, but instead will convince bar examiners to introduce cavity searches. And, as The Onion points out, ChatGPT was as depressed to take the test as the rest of us.
Grading Conversational Responses Of Chatbots
Chatbots have long been capable of answering basic questions and even responding to obscure prompts, but recently their improvements have been far more significant. Modern chatbots like Open AIs ChatGPT3 not only have the ability to answer basic questions but can write code and movie scripts and imitate well-known people. In this paper, we analyze ChatGPTs' responses to various questions from a dataset of queries from the popular Quora forum. We submitted sixty questions to ChatGPT and scored the answers based on three industry-standard metrics for grading machine translation: BLEU, METEOR, and ROUGE. These metrics allow us to compare the machine responses with the most upvoted human answer to the same question to assess ChatGPT's ability to submit a humanistic reply. The results showed that while the responses and translation abilities of ChatGPT are remarkable, they still fall short of what a typical human reaction would be.