All About Chat GPT From Open AI : What You Need To Know About It


All About Chat GPT From Open AI: What You Need To Know 


 

AI company Open AI, which created the AI art generator DALL·E, released the viral bot Chat GPT.

With over 1 million users soon after its launch, the bot is attracting more investors.


Open AI's blockbuster bot Chat GPT has sparked ongoing casual experiments, including some conducted by Insider reporters to simulate news stories or message potential dates.


In the minds of older millennials who used IRC chat rooms as a medium of instant messaging, the personal tone of the bot's conversations can remind them of chatting online. However, Chat GPT, known as a "large language model tool," doesn't speak with sentience or "think" like people.


According to experts, even though Chat GPT can explain quantum physics or write a poem on command, a total AI takeover is not imminent.


According to Matthew Sag, a law professor at Emory University who studies the implications of copyright for training and using large language models like Chat GPT, an infinite number of monkeys will eventually produce Shakespeare.


"There are a lot of monkeys here and you can see some impressive things, but there is an intrinsic difference between how humans produce language and what large language models do," he said.


With the help of large amounts of data and computing techniques, chat bots like GPT can predict how words will be strung together in a meaningful manner. As a result, they can mimic speech patterns and dispatch encyclopedic knowledge by tapping into a vast vocabulary and understanding words in context.


Other tech companies like Google and Meta have developed their own large language model tools, which use programs that respond to human prompts and devise sophisticated responses. A revolutionary move was also taken by Open AI by creating a user interface that is allowing the general public to experience it directly.


Recently, chat bots have been used in real-world service with strange results. Mental health company Koko came under fire this month after its founder wrote about using GPT-3 to respond to users.


The Koko co-founder clarified on Twitter that users weren't speaking directly to a chat bot, but that AI was used to "help craft" answers.


An AI-driven "lawyer" would advise defendants in actual courtroom traffic cases in real time, according to the founder of the controversial DoNotPay service.


The use of generative AI tools by other researchers appears to be more measured. The effectiveness of technology in the law is the focus of Daniel Linna Jr., a Northwestern University professor working for the Lawyers' Committee for Better Housing. Insider reported he's helping to test out a chat bot called "Rentervention."


Linna is currently experimenting with Chat GPT to see if it can help "Rentervention" come up with better responses and draft detailed letters.


"I think Chat GPT has a lot of potential, but it can't do everything - it's not magical," said Linna.


According to Open AI, "ChatGPT sometimes writes plausible-sounding, but incorrect or nonsensical answers.".



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