A ChatGPT-powered nail gun robot designed for construction has raised ethical concerns about AI weaponization after its video went viral .
ChatGPT maker OpenAI has finalized a version of its new reasoning AI model o3 mini and would be launching it in a couple of weeks, CEO Sam Altman said on Friday.
It’s a major get for Murati’s mysterious startup, which has also poached engineers and researchers from a number of other prominent AI firms.
OpenAI says it trained a new AI model called GPT-4b micro with Retro Biosciences, a longevity science startup trying to extend the human lifespan by 10
AI companies turned to social media content creators on platforms such as Instagram, Tiktok, YouTube as well as third-party licensing companies to gain access to unique content.
Generative artificial intelligence bellwether OpenAI said on Tuesday that it is introducing a beta feature called Tasks to ChatGPT, signaling the company's foray into the virtual assistant space, competing with Apple's Siri and Amazon's Alexa.
Meta will make AI bots more prominent in WhatsApp, a feature nobody really requested from the otherwise great chat app.
It’s unclear what Murati is working on, but Wired has learned that her mysterious AI startup has started hiring engineers and researchers from OpenAI and other AI firms. Murati won’t pivot to a non-AI field after working on ChatGPT, Sora, and other OpenAI products.
This deal is part of a broader partnership between the two organizations and is the first time OpenAI will directly fund a newsroom.
The 39-year-old tech mogul denied any wrongdoing in a joint statement alongside his mother, Connie, and two brothers, Max and Jack.
OpenAI is making a foray into scientific discovery with an AI built to help manufacture stem cells. When you think of AI’s contributions to science, you probably think of AlphaFold, the Google DeepMind protein-folding program that earned its creator a Nobel Prize last year.
Axios is one of the top news sites on the internet, and it has a unique way of reporting. The publication announced that it’s expanding its local new business with four new news rooms. These new news rooms will be in Kansas City, Missouri; Huntsville, Alabama; Boulder, Colorado; and Pittsburg, Pennsylvania.