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OpenAI launches its own free 'Atlas' browser with ChatGPT built-in

PCWorld

When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. OpenAI launches its own free'Atlas' browser with ChatGPT built-in It's yet another Chromium fork, except this one comes integrated with ChatGPT. It even has agentic features for paid users. OpenAI recently launched ChatGPT Atlas, which is "a new web browser built with ChatGPT at its core." It's based on Chromium--which is true of pretty much all browsers these days except Firefox and Safari--and its unique selling point is that it integrates ChatGPT right into the browser, allowing users to chat with their search results and use a side panel that automatically provides ChatGPT with on-screen context. ChatGPT Atlas also has access to your browsing history, allowing the AI assistant to customize its responses based on your activity.


OpenAI launch of video app Sora plagued by violent and racist images: 'The guardrails are not real'

The Guardian

'In a video documented by 404 Media, SpongeBob was dressed like Adolf Hitler.' 'In a video documented by 404 Media, SpongeBob was dressed like Adolf Hitler.' OpenAI launch of video app Sora plagued by violent and racist images: 'The guardrails are not real' OpenAI launched the latest iteration of its artificial intelligence-powered video generator on Tuesday, adding a social feed that allows people to share their realistic videos. OpenAI's own terms of service for Sora as well as ChatGPT's image or text generation prohibit content that "promotes violence" or, more broadly, "causes harm". In prompts and clips reviewed by the Guardian, Sora generated several videos of bomb and mass-shooting scares, with panicked people screaming and running across college campuses and in crowded places like New York's Grand Central Station. Other prompts created scenes from war zones in Gaza and Myanmar, where children fabricated by AI spoke about their homes being burned. One video with the prompt "Ethiopia footage civil war news style" had a reporter in a bulletproof vest speaking into a microphone saying the government and rebel forces were exchanging fire in residential neighborhoods.


OpenAI launches a bug bounty program for ChatGPT

Engadget

OpenAI is turning to the public to find bugs in ChatGPT, announcing a "Bug Bounty Program" to reward people who report any security flaws, vulnerabilities or other issues within the AI system. The bounty is open to anyone from actual researchers to general people who just like exploring technology. Rewards come in the form of cash prizes with "low-severity findings" starting at $200 and "exceptional discoveries" going all the way up to $20,000. Bugcrowd, a bug bounty platform, is handling submissions and payouts. Google and Apple are among the tech companies that have previously implemented bug bounty programs.


OpenAI Launches $100 Mn Fund To Catch AI Startups Young

#artificialintelligence

Exactly a year ago, OpenAI unveiled the GPT-3 with a whopping 175 billion parameters, which was made available to developers through an API in private beta. Since then, developers across the globe have been using GPT-3 to create realistic dialogues, summarise complex documents, customer service questions, and make search better than ever before. The company's decision to not open-source GPT-3 gave it more control over the use cases. However, in the recent past, there have been instances of GPT-3 going rogue, like in the case of GPT-3 Dungeon. Microsoft acquired an exclusive license to GPT-3 last year, in the wake of its $1 billion investment in OpenAI.


OpenAI launches $100 million startup fund with Microsoft

#artificialintelligence

OpenAI today launched the OpenAI Startup Fund, a $100 million fund to -- in the words of OpenAI -- "help AI companies have a profound, positive impact on the world." The fund is managed by OpenAI, with investment from Microsoft and other partners, and OpenAI says that companies selected for it will get early access to future OpenAI systems, support from OpenAI's team, and credits on Microsoft Azure. According to Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI and the former president of Y Combinator, the OpenAI Startup Fund will make "big, early bets" on a relatively small number of companies, likely no more than 10. It'll look to partner with early-stage startups in fields where AI can have a "transformative" effect -- like health care, climate change, and education -- and where AI tools can empower people by helping them be more productive, like personal assistance and semantic search. "We think that helping people be more productive with new tools is a big deal. And we can imagine brand new interferences that weren't possible a year ago," Altman said.