Hr News
Trending

The open questions about openAI and generative AI

Widespread concerns have arisen around artificial intelligence (AI) after an AI-powered chatbot reportedly encouraged a man in Belgium to commit suicide, and a mayor in Australia threatened to sue OpenAI over false claims that he was imprisoned for bribery. While many companies have adopted generative AI, and new startups are emerging, concerns have arisen surrounding its application, including transparency of data, privacy and the spread of inaccurate information

Source | economictimes.indiatimes.com | Debleena Majumdar, ET Online

A mayor in Australia has threatened to sue OpenAI if it does not rectify the false claim that he was imprisoned for bribery. In another case highlighting the perils of artificial intelligence, a man in Belgium died by suicide after an AI-powered chatbot reportedly encouraged him to kill himself.

These reports emerge at a time when a daily dose of generative AI is becoming a part of our morning news routine. Also, OpenAI has said it would over the next few months launch ChatGPT-5, a version in which the artificial-intelligence chatbot is likely to start becoming an AGI or an artificial general intelligence — where a machine can do any task a human can.

One of the largest companies are either developing their own generative AI solutions or finding ways to incorporate generative AI as part of their own products and solutions. And there are a range of new generative AI startups that are working on contextual innovations, and investors who are watching the trends and looking to invest on the right side of the cycle.

Click here to read the full article

Source
economictimes.indiatimes.com
Show More

Related Articles

Back to top button