OpenAI, the company behind the ChatGPT chatbot that was founded by Sam Altman, is rolling out new features. The company says the new version will let users create GPTs., a new way for anyone to create a “tailored version” of ChatGPT to be more helpful in their daily life, at specific tasks, at work, or at home—and then share that creation with others.
OpenAI is also offering a New GPT-4 Turbo model that the company boasts is “more capable, cheaper and supports a 128K context window.”
The releases come just a few weeks after The New York Times reported that OpenAI is in talks to be sold at a company valuation of $80 billion. If so, then OpenAI will have tripled its value in just six months.
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In September, lawsuits were filed against OpenAI by none other than Game of Thrones author George R.R. Martin, John Grisham, Jodi Picoult, David Baldacci, Sylvia Day, Jonathan Franzen and more. The suit, filed in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York and brought by the Authors Guild, alleges that the AI driven editing and rewriting tech provided by OpenAI is guilty of “systematic theft on a mass scale” since it helps people reuse their copyrighted materials without permission.
ChatGPT (Generative Pre-trained Transformer) is a chatbot that was launched by OpenAI in November 2022. Chatbot.com explains that a chatbot is a software that simulates human-like conversations with users via chat. Its key task is to answer user questions with instant messages.
Sam Altman was born in St. Louis Missouri to a Jewish family in 1985. Altman studied computer science at Stanford, but never completed his B.A. When he was only 19-years-old, Altman co-founded Loopta location-based social networking mobile application, and managed to raise $30 million for the new company at such a young age.
Altman is a vocal advocate for responsible AI development. He has argued that AI has the potential to solve some of the world’s most pressing problems, but that it is important to develop AI in a safe and ethical way.
Sam Altman has been named one of the 100 most influential people in the world by Time magazine and one of the “Best Young Entrepreneurs in Technology” by Businessweek. He is also the founder of the Long Term Future Fund, a venture capital fund that invests in companies working to solve long-term problems like climate change and pandemics.