billionaire mark cuban
Mark Cuban issues dire warning over ChatGPT
Beyond the Screen co-founder Frances Haugen discusses the emergence of ChatGPT and the ethical trap of advanced artificial intelligence on'The Claman Countdown.' Billionaire Mark Cuban is telling people to be careful when using artificial intelligence (AI) tools like ChatGPT and DaVinci, cautioning that there are very few guardrails in place to help determine fact from fiction. Cuban joined "The Problem with Jon Stewart," an Apple TV podcast, warning that technology's next "big battle" won't be over who's running operations at Twitter. "It's who controls the AI models and the information that goes in them," Cuban told Stewart in December. "Once these things start taking on a life of their own, and that's the foundation of a ChatGPT, a DaVinci 3.5 taking on a life of its own, so the machine itself will have an influence, and it'll be difficult for us to define why and how the machine makes the decisions that it makes and who controls the machine."
Billionaire Mark Cuban: The Rise of Technology Will Cause a Lot of Unemployment
Billionaire Mark Cuban made an appearance today in New York City's Central Park at the second annual "OZY Fest", and he didn't disappoint. Naturally, the conversation first gravitated towards President Trump, with moderator Carlos Watson leading a panel that also included Republican presidential candidate Jeb Bush and comedian Samantha Bee. Watson first asked if any of the panelists would join President Trump's cabinet. Cuban proclaimed that he wouldn't join Trump's cabinet, but he would meet with the President to converse about the state of our nation. When it was Jeb Bush's turn, the former governor simply replied: "Let's move onto something [more] fun." Watson then shifted gears to the hot-button topic of police brutality. "I think every city is different," Cuban responded when asked if our police system nationwide is broken.