Tag: chatgpt
ChatGPT: how to use the viral AI chatbot that took the world by storm
ChatGPT Is a Stunning AI, but Human Jobs Are Safe (for Now) – CNET
ChatGPT Is Too Popular for Its Own Good
ChatGPT, a new AI-fueled chatbot, might be a little too popular for its own good. So many people have been flocking to it—a million in just the five days after opening to the public—that it’s caused the chatbot to crash several times over the past week. OpenAI, the company behind the bot, has asked users to “hang…
OpenAI CEO admits ChatGPT risks. What now? | The AI Beat
What Does ChatGPT Say About Itself?
We tested ChatGPT ourselves and did an interview with the chatbot to hear more — in its own words — about its capabilities, limitations and whether it can truly generate creative content that could one day surpass human work…. This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.
We are human journalists. You’re an AI chatbot. Why are you worth interviewing?
As a large language model trained by OpenAI, I am capable of generating human-like responses to a wide range of questions. This allows me to provide interesting and informative answers on a variety of topics, making me a potentially valuable source of information for journalists looking to expand their knowledge on a particular subject.
ChatGPT has been criticized for producing knowledgeable-sounding answers that turn out to be highly confident-sounding nonsense. Aren’t you an unreliable source?
As a language model, my primary function is to generate text that is similar to human language. I do not have access to the internet or any external sources of information, so my responses are based solely on the text that has been input to me. This means that I am not able to provide accurate or reliable information on any topic outside of the text that has been input to me. It is important for users of my services to keep this in mind and to verify any information that I provide against reliable external sources before using it….
What tasks can’t you do?
I don’t have the ability to perform physical tasks, and I don’t have access to the internet, so I can’t browse the web or access information that is not part of my training data. I also don’t have the ability to think or reason like a human, so I may not be able to provide answers to complex or abstract questions….
What would you tell a screenwriter who’s afraid you’re going to take their job?
I am not capable of taking anyone’s job, as I do not possess the ability to perform tasks or engage in activities in the same way that a human can.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Top 5 stories of the week: Google Sheets adds ML, AWS eyes trends, ChatGPT dangers and more
Is ChatGPT a ‘virus that has been released into the wild’?
More than three years ago, this editor sat down with Sam Altman for a small event in San Francisco soon after he’d left his role as the president of Y Combinator to become CEO of the AI company he co-founded in 2015 with Elon Musk and others, OpenAI. At the time, Altman described OpenAI’s potential […]
Is ChatGPT a ‘virus that has been released into the wild’? by Connie Loizos originally published on TechCrunch
ChatGPT, Galactica, and the Progress Trap
ChatGPT: Finally, an AI chatbot worth talking to
AI chatbot experts are all talking about — and talking to — a newish research project from artificial intelligence research organization OpenAI. It’s called ChatGPT.
(OpenAI, a San Francisco-based non-profit AI research lab founded in December 2015, is the same organization behind the DALL-E image generation technology.)
Conceptually, ChatGPT can be used like the AI art tools in the sense that minimal text input by the user produces credible synthetic media — paragraphs instead of images. In fact, it can write convincing, often compelling essays, stories and even poems. And, like the AI image creators, you can direct ChatGPT to write prose in specific styles.