Robo-writers: the rise and risks of language-generating AI
In June 2020, a new and powerful artificial intelligence (AI) began dazzling technologists in Silicon Valley. Called GPT-3 and created by the research firm OpenAI in San Francisco, California, it was the latest and most powerful in a series of'large language models': AIs that generate fluent streams of text after imbibing billions of words from books, articles and websites. GPT-3 had been trained on around 200 billion words, at an estimated cost of tens of millions of dollars. The developers who were invited to try out GPT-3 were astonished. "I have to say I'm blown away," wrote Arram Sabeti, founder of a technology start-up who is based in Silicon Valley. "It's far more coherent than any AI language system I've ever tried. All you have to do is write a prompt and it'll add text it thinks would plausibly follow. I've gotten it to write songs, stories, press releases, guitar tabs, interviews, essays, technical manuals. I feel like I've seen the future."
Mar-4-2021, 01:05:54 GMT
- Country:
- Europe > Germany
- Baden-Württemberg > Karlsruhe Region > Heidelberg (0.04)
- North America
- Canada > Quebec
- Montreal (0.04)
- United States
- California
- Alameda County > Berkeley (0.04)
- Monterey County > Monterey (0.04)
- San Francisco County > San Francisco (0.54)
- Hawaii (0.05)
- New York (0.05)
- North Carolina (0.04)
- Pennsylvania > Allegheny County
- Pittsburgh (0.04)
- California
- Canada > Quebec
- Europe > Germany
- Genre:
- Press Release (0.34)
- Industry:
- Education (0.68)
- Information Technology (1.00)
- Technology: