Gpt

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  • This Oct. 21, 2015 photo shows signage with a logo at the YouTube Space LA offices in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Danny Moloshok)

    YouTube CEO warns OpenAI that training models on its videos is against the rules

    by 
    Sarah Fielding
    Sarah Fielding
    04.05.2024

    YouTube CEO Neal Mohan stated that OpenAI using its videos to train AI tool Sora would violate its terms of use.

  • Image of the Psync Genie S AI-enabled home security camera in its default upright position on a wooden table with a wooden cabinet in the background

    Psync's Genie S security camera uses GPT to describe what it sees

    by 
    Daniel Cooper
    Daniel Cooper
    11.01.2023

    It's a home security camera with the promise of generative AI to describe what it thinks it's seeing.

  • buncha multicolored discs inline like a cross section of a waveform

    Meta's Voicebox AI is a Dall-E for text-to-speech

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    06.16.2023

    Meta's Voicebox AI promises to do for the spoken word what ChatGPT and Dall-E, respectfully, did for text and image generation.

  • A screenshot showing AI integration in Slack.

    Slack is getting in on the GPT AI trend

    by 
    Mariella Moon
    Mariella Moon
    05.04.2023

    At its World Tour NYC event, Salesforce has introduced Slack GPT, which it describes as a three-pronged vision that integrates AI features into the business messaging app.

  • ipopba via Getty Images

    OpenAI published the tool that writes disturbingly believable fake news

    by 
    Christine Fisher
    Christine Fisher
    11.07.2019

    In February, OpenAI announced that it had developed an algorithm that could write believable fake news and spam. Deciding that power was too dangerous to unleash, OpenAI planned a staged release so that it could offer pieces of the tech and analyze how it was used. Now, OpenAI says it has seen "no strong evidence of misuse," and this week, it published the full AI.

  • New tech keeps tabs on your liver via cellphone

    by 
    Chris Ziegler
    Chris Ziegler
    01.14.2007

    In the scheme of things, blood alcohol-screening phones probably stand to save more lives than... uh, Glutamine Oxaloacetic Transaminase and Glutamine Pyruvic Transaminase (affectionately known as GOT and GPT) screening phones, but health tech is health tech, and we've no doubt there's someone out there who's going to benefit from this. A crack team at Korea's Research Institute of Bioscience and Biotechnology has developed a sensor that monitors GOT and GPT -- key indicators of liver function -- and uploads key stats via phone, presumably to a hospital or other interested parties. So if you've had the exact same idea kicking around for a while, sorry to say you might as well drop it now; the patent apps are filed and the team plans to pursue commercialization in the near future.[Via textually.org]