ChatGPT turns the internet into a sanitary environment - Career Canvas

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Saturday, January 6, 2024

ChatGPT turns the internet into a sanitary environment

 


At the heart of ChatGPT is a tension that could quickly break. Will technology expand our world or limit it? In other words, will AI-powered chatbots open new doors to learning and discovery, or will they lock down information and limit the truth? Are we at risk of giving us unreliable access to

OpenAI, the maker of ChatGPT, today announced a partnership with media group Axel Springer. This seems to bring us closer to the answer. As part of the deal, ChatGPT will offer users the opportunity to present "a curated summary of global news content" published by news organizations in Axel Springer's portfolio, including Politico and Business Insider. I will have it. Details aren't entirely clear, but the announcement says that when a query is submitted through ChatGPT, the bot will be able to create an answer based on the Axel Springer story, as well as a link to the story itself. Similarly, material from Axel Springer's publications will be used as training data for his OpenAI to further develop the company's products. Your product may already occupy something like the entire Internet.

Artificial intelligence has proven to be a quick learner in recent years, despite being raised in ways that would put even the most brutal schoolmaster to shame. The AI ​​is locked away in the airtight Borges Library for months, without bathroom breaks or sleep, and instructed not to surface until it has completed a self-paced crash course in human culture. About the curriculum: A significant portion of all extant texts that we have ever produced.

When AI emerges from these epic learning sessions, it gains amazing new abilities. People with the most linguistically flexible minds, hyperpolyglots, can reliably switch between a dozen languages. AI now allows him to translate over 100 in real time. You can create pastiches in different literary styles and write passable poems that rhyme. DeepMind's Ithaca AI can look at Greek letters carved into marble and infer which letters were carved by vandals thousands of years ago.

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