Elon Musk, Sam Altman
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OpenAI admitted it had to develop a specific instruction in the code of its latest model of ChatGPT to stop it from repeatedly referencing “goblins, gremlins, and other creatures.”
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has apologized to a community in Canada after a mass shooting by a banned ChatGPT user.
A San Francisco-based AI tech giant, OpenAI, and its CEO, Sam Altman, were slapped with lawsuits in federal court Wednesday following a school shooting that left six children
Seven families of victims in a February school shooting sued OpenAI and CEO Sam Altman on Wednesday, alleging the company and its ChatGPT chatbot were complicit in the injuries or deaths of their children.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is being sued alongside his company in San Francisco by the grieving families of those killed in one of Canada’s deadliest mass shootings. The families say that OpenAI failed to warn the police of the imminent threat created by the shooter.
The ChatGPT account of the shooter, who killed eight people in a small British Columbia community, had been banned about eight months prior to the massacre.
Rough napkin math suggests that Altman is sending somewhere around 39,000 messages a year, and that's limited to a five-day workweek.
Humans have been keeping time as far back as 3500 B.C. ChatGPT is still figuring it out.
Husk has been poking holes in AI chatbots, even earning him a response from the OpenAI CEO. Did you know that December is spelled with an X? Neither did we—until one influencer’s viral video showed the pitfalls of relying on AI for answers.
According to OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, his firm is losing tens of millions of dollars due to some small words we're taught to mind every day.