Chatbots can now talk, but experts warn they may be listening too
ChatGPT has proven it can help students with their homework, but now it is helping teachers create those very courses, a computer science professor told Fox News. The popular artifical intelligence platform ChatGPT will now be able to respond to spoken words and images, causing concern among some experts who believe the application could lead to unwanted invasions of privacy. OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, released the new version of the chatbot on Monday, allowing it for the first time to interact with users with the spoken word, according to a report from the New York Times. "We're looking to make ChatGPT easier to use – and more helpful," Peter Deng, OpenAI's vice president of consumer and enterprise product, told the New York Times. GOOGLE'S AI IS TRYING TO ONE-UP CHATGPT AND BING WITH NEW EVERYDAY AI FEATURES Microsoft Bing Chat and ChatGPT AI chat applications are seen on a mobile device.
Sep-29-2023, 06:00:30 GMT
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