New Delhi: Google has denied the reports that it is copying Microsoft-owned OpenAI’s ChatGPT to train its AI chatbot called Bard.
A report in The Information claimed that OpenAI’s success “has forced the two AI research teams within Google’s parent, Alphabet, to overcome years of intense rivalry to work together”.
According to the report, citing sources, software engineers at Google’s Brain AI group are working with employees at DeepMind, which is a sibling company within Alphabet to develop software to compete with OpenAI.
“Known internally as Gemini, the joint effort began in recent weeks, after Google stumbled with Bard, its first attempt to compete with OpenAI’s chatbot,” the report claimed.
However, a Google spokesperson told The Verge that “Bard is not trained on any data from ShareGPT or ChatGPT”.
Meanwhile, Google has announced it is opening up access to its ChatGPT competitor “Bard” as an early experiment for users to collaborate with generative AI.
Early access to Bard has rolled out in the US and the UK, and the company said it will expand the access over time to more countries and languages.
Bard, like OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Microsoft’s Bing chatbot, is based on a large language model (LLM), specifically a lightweight and optimised version of LaMDA, which the tech giant said will be updated with newer, more capable models in the future.
Users can interact with Bard by asking questions and refining their responses with follow-up questions.
New Delhi: OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which can write original prose and chat with human fluency, holds the potential to completely change healthcare, according to a report on Thursday.
The report by GlobalData, a data and analytics company, said that the revolutionary technology is coming faster than most people in the industry currently recognise.
It estimates the total Artificial Intelligence (AI) market will be worth $383.3 billion in 2030, with a robust 21 per cent compound annual growth rate (CAGR) from 2022 to 2030.
“ChatGPT can be used to assist doctors with bureaucratic tasks such as writing patient letters so doctors can spend more time on patient interaction. More importantly, chatbots have the potential to increase the effectiveness and accuracy of the processes for preventive care, symptom identification, and post-recovery care,” said Tina Deng, Principal Medical Devices Analyst at GlobalData, in a statement.
AI integration into chatbots and virtual assistants can motivate and interact with patients. It can review a patient’s symptoms and then recommend diagnostic advice and different options like virtual check-ins or face-to-face visits with a healthcare professional.
This can reduce the workload for hospital staff, increase the efficiency of patient flow, and save healthcare costs.
During the Covid-19 pandemic, chatbots have been developed for contactless screening of Covid-19 symptoms in healthcare institutions and to help answer questions from the public.
Chatbots can answer patient queries about medical products and share brand news with customers.
Pharmaceutical and medical device companies can benefit from using AI-enabled virtual agents to automate customer service processes and give patients round-the-clock attention.
Additionally, chatbots can be used for social purposes, increasing patient engagement. Chatbots offer advice on how to maintain health after treatment. They send automated reminders to take medications and re-visit information.
Meanwhile, a recent study in the Journal of The National Cancer Institute Cancer Spectrum, showed that when it comes to answering people’s questions about cancer, especially regarding myths and misconceptions, ChatGPT was found 97 per cent accurate in providing the correct information.
The AI was so accurate that the test subjects were unaware whether the answers came from ChatGPT or the National Cancer Institute.
However, the usage of chatbots in patient care and medical research raises several ethical concerns.
As massive patient data is fed into machine learning to improve the accuracy of chatbots, patient information is vulnerable. The information provided by chatbots might be more inaccurate and misleading, depending on the sources fed into the chatbots.
“Regardless of the risks, AI-powered chatbots will be used widely in the healthcare industry. More regulations are expected to govern the health uses of chatbots,”Deng said.
Depriving high school and college students of skills for critical inquiry and books that complicate or undermine origin myths seems to be an effort to preserve the whitewashed view of history that politicians stoke for political gain. Without critical learning, an internet version of history — discovered through search engines, websites like Wikipedia and artificial intelligence platforms like ChatGPT— is what they are more likely to tap or receive. These culturally popular versions are more likely to be boosted by the algorithms that drive internet search engines and AI.
To see how much of a danger this might be, I decided to test those popular tools on a topic I know something about. I am contemplating writing a book about America’s unsung abolitionists and exploring a question central to both the African American freedom struggle and our national identity as “the land of the free”: Why did the Founding Fathers accommodate slavery and who among them objected to that “peculiar institution”?
There is a great origin myth about the Founders, one that DeSantis himself has mouthed and perpetuated, suggesting they favored freedom for all. But that doesn’t match the historical record, which shows that only one of the Founding Fathers, Gouverneur Morris, fiercely resisted any accommodations for slavery during the Constitutional Convention. For all the Founding Fathers, including those who spoke out against slavery in some contexts, the debate was over how much to accommodate slavery, not whether to abolish it.
I decided to conduct an experiment to see what information might be available to students who are curious about this topic but don’t yet have the kind of rigorous research and analytical skills taught in AP courses or college. What would the internet and AI offer up to students on the Founding Fathers and slavery?
I started with ChatGPT, asking: “Which delegates to the Constitutional Convention spoke out against slavery and what did they say?” It responded that “several delegates argued for the abolition of slavery” and offered anti-slavery quotes from four Northern delegates: Morris, Benjamin Franklin, Elbridge Gerry and James Wilson. Then it made up a fairy tale conclusion: “These were just a few examples of the many delegates who spoke out against slavery during the Constitutional Convention. However, despite their objections, slavery was not abolished at the time and remained a contentious issue in American society for many years to come.”
This account is very far from the truth of what transpired at the Constitutional Convention. ChatGPT seemed to equate criticism of slavery or the slave trade with calling for abolition. But there were no proposals for abolition during the 100-day debate among 55 delegates in the summer of 1787, not even from Morris. With much national wealth and commerce utterly dependent on slavery, in the North as well as the South, any such proposal would have been a political non-starter. Instead, Southern delegates clashed with Northern delegates repeatedly over the accommodations they sought for slavery, as a condition of forming a new national government.
Google was more useful though daunting. It offered a plethora of links reflecting varying viewpoints that I had to wade through to find more accurate information. One opinion writer identified Founders that lived their anti-slavery values and declined to enslave people, one of whom was Morris. At the convention, Georgians and South Carolinians zealously pressed the slavery cause, as did other Southerners. Numerous websites identified delegates that made anti-slavery statements but only Morris seemed to unequivocally condemn slavery and resist Southern threats to oppose the Constitution if their pro-slavery demands were not met.
To test the truth of this claim, I read two books that rehearsed in detail the founding constitutional debates over slavery and came to diametrically opposed conclusions about the Founders’ intentions — but aligned on the facts.
Historian Sean Wilentz lauded the convention delegates for not condoning owning property in humans, signaled in part by leaving the word “slave” out of the Constitution. Legal historian Paul Finkelman took an opposing view, concluding that enslavers won major concessions from the rest of the country and gave up very little in return save a technical, linguistic refusal to legally sanction slavery. Both reads were tedious but both did show Morris as the most ardent voice at the convention against slavery.
In fact, despite DeSantis-style assertions that the Founding Fathers began America’s march toward abolition, the only convention delegate who said anything that remotely contemplated immediate Black freedom was Morris. Morris argued that he “never would concur in upholding domestic slavery,” that it was a “nefarious institution” and “the curse of heaven” where it prevailed. Morris argued against the notorious 3/5ths compromise and called the Southern states’ bluff: if they wanted enslaved people to be included for purposes of allocating state representation in Congress then they should make them citizens with the right to vote, he argued.
I decided to give ChatGPT a second chance and tried to lead it a bit to the right answer, this time asking: “What did Gouverneur Morris say at the Constitutional Convention about slavery and what specifically did he propose to do about it?” ChatGPT took a moment, then concocted an answer, claiming Morris called for the immediate abolition of slavery. He did not. As a Founding Father to the New York state Constitution a decade before he had unsuccessfully called for it to condemn slavery. At the national convention he did propose that only free persons be counted toward representation in Congress (as had Alexander Hamilton at the outset) and his proposal was overwhelmingly rejected, by delegates from the North as well as the South.
I found an imperfect hero in Morris, mainly from reading his own words. He gave the most speeches at the convention (173), besting his fellow Pennsylvanian Wilson (168) and James Madison (161). In speaking regularly to oppose protections for slavery and make his opinions on other matters known, Morris showed that the Constitution was a transactional, not divine, document in which tradeoffs were struck. At the convention, he contemplated aloud that perhaps it would be best for Northern and Southern states to go their separate ways because, with the “curse of heaven” that was slavery, these regions were bound to divide.
Morris was prescient and on the right side of history. Most of the other men at the convention were far less brave. Nearly half of the delegates were enslavers themselves, including Madison, hailed as the “Father of the Constitution,” and some of those delegates, like Virginian George Mason who enslaved hundreds, spoke against the morality of slavery. But morality or ideals had to be sacrificed to the “necessity of compromise” as Wilson, ostensibly anti-slavery, urged at the convention. (Wilson was the one who first proposed the 3/5ths clause.)
Ultimately the delegates adopted multiple mechanisms by which the Constitution accommodated slavery and suppressed democracy. The Constitution barred Congress from interfering with the slave trade for 20 years. It barred states from emancipating fugitives and required that enslaved escapees be returned “on demand.” It bolstered slavery-state power with the 3/5ths clause, disproportionately allocating representation in Congress and in the Electoral College, which also incorporated the 3/5ths formula, giving slavery interests a boost in presidential elections.
Whatever the framers’ intentions, these structural concessions enabled slavery to endure and expand. For nearly 80 years after the Convention, moral, political and constitutional argument all failed to end slavery nationally in no small part because over decades the Supreme Court largely reified rather than undermined the peculiar institution. It took Southern secession and a civil war to end Black chattel slavery. Only with pro-slavery Southerners absent from Congress could political abolitionism prevail. Radical Republicans like Thaddeus Stevens and Charles Sumner, in coalition with moderate Republicans, finally were able to disrupt the Founders’ original compromise with the 13th, 14th and 15th Amendments, and confer freedom and equality, in theory, on the formerly enslaved.
Unfortunately, supremacists and dog-whistling politicians went on to create follow-institutions that heavily controlled Black people, including convict leasing, peonage, Southern Jim Crow, Northern ghettos, and mass incarceration. Truth telling and critical inquiry are required if we are to address racially unjust systems or stop violent white nationalist terrorism.
My point is not to denigrate the framers who accommodated slavery but to show that our nation has always been in a complex dance between ideals we are still fighting for and a dangerous ideology — white supremacy – that still needs to be vanquished. That ideology is promoted in dark corners of the internet, animating the “great replacement theory” that has incited domestic terrorists. Actual history requires deep research, reading of texts, checking of citations, discernment of truth or at least acknowledgement of opposing interpretations and choosing among them — the kinds of skills taught in AP and college-level courses.
The framers had their Enlightenment ideals. Abolitionists were in the vanguard of creating a politics that made those ideals true for more people. For me personally, I celebrate brave abolitionist voices like Gouverneur Morris, Thomas Paine (who wrote an anti-slavery essay before he wrote Common Sense), Phillis Wheatley, Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, Thaddeus Stevens and others I claim as Founding Fathers and mothers. Through them I can genuinely profess love for this country and its ideals, even as I advocate against present systems that undermine those ideals.
The truth is complicated and suppressed by cynics and ideologues whose views can be amplified by search engines and their algorithms. Artificial intelligence, I fear, will accelerate its burial.
New generations, more diverse and open to difference than their parents and grandparents, should not be deprived of the skills and materials they need to discover rich narratives of the American story — including unsung heroes to believe in.
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#Opinion #ChatGPT #Parroting #Myths #Slavery
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
New Delhi: Web browser company Opera on Wednesday announced that it is adding AI-powered features to its desktop browsers Opera and Opera GX — namely AI Prompts, plus sidebar access to ChatGPT, and ChatSonic, to transform users’ browsing experience.
These new tools are available in early access across all desktop platforms, according to the company.
AI Prompts, a native feature in the Opera Browser, will help users shorten a long confusing text or explain it to them, whether it’s a paragraph, a whole article, or even a website.
“Accessible when you highlight text or directly from the address bar, AI Prompts is your new, go-to tool to interpret, to summarise, and to explore the web, offering you an experience that’s tailored to your interests and needs,” Opera said in a blogpost.
Besides the new AI Prompts feature, users now also have access to the web versions of ChatGPT and ChatSonic right in the sidebar of the Opera browser.
The company said these two new features will help generate ideas, summaries, translations, and itineraries, plus users can write code, learn music, get help on math, draft text, and more.
“ChatSonic is additionally so clever that it can create images for you. Altogether, the new AIGC tools offer a portal to a more personal and intelligent web – one that provides solutions to your specific needs,” the browser maker mentioned.
Moreover, the company stated that it intends to announce more AI-powered features in the future, powered by its own GPT-based model.
No doubt that UPSC is considered as the toughest exam in India! Proving the same, even ChatGPT has failed to clear the UPSC exam. ChatGPT (Chat Generative Pre-trained Transformer) is designed to generate human-like articles based on the given input Reports suggest that ChatGPT failed in UPSC prelims exam. The AI chatbot could only answer 54 out of 100 questions from Question Paper 1 (Set A) of UPSC Prelims 2022. Considering last year’s cut-off, UPSC failed the exam.
OpenAI claims that ChatGPT has limited knowledge of world and events after 2021. AIM claims that they went ahead and sent ChatGPT all 100 questions from Question Paper 1 (Set A) from the UPSC Prelims 2022. Surprisingly AI chatbot ChatGPT could only answer 54 out of 100 questions.
AI Chatbot ChatGPT was asked questions from several topics such as Geography, Economy, History, Ecology, General Science and current affairs. Reports suggest that since the current affairs questions were also based on 2022, ChatGPT failed to answer. However, report also claims that ChatGPT provided wrong answers to topics from sections like General Science, Geography and Economy.
In another update ChatGPT, the AI tool has been banned by many institutes. ChatGPT, the chat friendly AI bot has taken over headlines for its quirky remarks, quick tools and for helping out students with their homework assignments. Central Board of Secondary Education, CBSE Board Exams are underway and the Board has issued a set of board exam guidelines. Board has prohibited the use of Artificial Intelligence-based ChatGPT.
Hyderabad: One of the most-awaited and joyous seasons of the year, the holy month of Ramzan is around the corner. In India, it is expected to begin on March 22 and end on April 1 (dates may vary). The month-long celebrations are not only about fasting and prayers, but also about feasting and shopping. As the sun sets, the streets in Hyderabad come alive with the aroma of delectable food being cooked in every nook and corner of the city.
From the traditional haleem, the mouth-watering kebabs to other iftar snacks, Hyderabad turns into a food lover’s paradise during this time. As Ramzan is fast approaching, we asked ChatGPT, a viral Artificial Intelligence (AI)-powered chatbot, to list the 5 best places to try Haleem in Hyderabad. Before we jump onto the list, check what exactly is Haleem.
What exactly is Haleem?
Hyderabadi Haleem (Instagram)
This lip-smacking and mouth-watering unique textured dish is prepared by using mutton or chicken that is pounded, mixed with a load of dry fruits and spices and cooked on the Bhatti in a large vessel. Forget about diet when you think of having haleem, Credits? A lot of ghee and oil! Drooling already, aren’t you?
Here are some popular restaurants in Hyderabad suggested by ChatGPT.
Pista House
Shah Ghouse Cafe & Restaurant
Sarvi
Cafe 555
Shadab
Well, it is relevant to mention here that these Haleem spots are actually incredibly popular among the city residents, and if you ask anyone, they are likely to give you the same list. These haleem places have gained a popularity for serving the best haleem in town. People from all over Hyderabad flock to these spots to savour the delicious flavours of this mouth-watering dish.
(Image Source: venkat_dilip Instagram)
The above-mentioned are just a few of the best haleem places in Hyderabad. Apart from them, some other must-try spots to try this delicacy during Ramzan are —
Nayaab Hotel
Peshawar
Chichas
Mehfil
Cafe Bahar
Hyderabad House
Hotel City Diamond
Which is your favourite spot among the above? Which restaurant, according to you, offers the best authentic taste of Hyderabadi haleem? Do tell us in the comments section below.
Artificial intelligence’s newest sensation — the gabby chatbot-on-steroids ChatGPT — is sending European rulemakers back to the drawing board on how to regulate AI.
The chatbot dazzled the internet in past months with its rapid-fire production of human-like prose. It declared its love for a New York Times journalist. It wrote a haiku about monkeys breaking free from a laboratory. It even got to the floor of the European Parliament, where two German members gave speeches drafted by ChatGPT to highlight the need to rein in AI technology.
But after months of internet lolz — and doomsaying from critics — the technology is now confronting European Union regulators with a puzzling question: How do we bring this thing under control?
The technology has already upended work done by the European Commission, European Parliament and EU Council on the bloc’s draft artificial intelligence rulebook, the Artificial Intelligence Act. The regulation, proposed by the Commission in 2021, was designed to ban some AI applications like social scoring, manipulation and some instances of facial recognition. It would also designate some specific uses of AI as “high-risk,” binding developers to stricter requirements of transparency, safety and human oversight.
The catch? ChatGPT can serve both the benign and the malignant.
This type of AI, called a large language model, has no single intended use: People can prompt it to write songs, novels and poems, but also computer code, policy briefs, fake news reports or, as a Colombian judge has admitted, court rulings. Other models trained on images rather than text can generate everything from cartoons to false pictures of politicians, sparking disinformation fears.
In one case, the new Bing search engine powered by ChatGPT’s technology threatened a researcher with “hack[ing]” and “ruin.” In another, an AI-powered app to transform pictures into cartoons called Lensa hypersexualized photos of Asian women.
“These systems have no ethical understanding of the world, have no sense of truth, and they’re not reliable,” said Gary Marcus, an AI expert and vocal critic.
These AIs “are like engines. They are very powerful engines and algorithms that can do quite a number of things and which themselves are not yet allocated to a purpose,” said Dragoș Tudorache, a Liberal Romanian lawmaker who, together with S&D Italian lawmaker Brando Benifei, is tasked with shepherding the AI Act through the European Parliament.
Already, the tech has prompted EU institutions to rewrite their draft plans. The EU Council, which represents national capitals, approved its version of the draft AI Act in December, which would entrust the Commission with establishing cybersecurity, transparency and risk-management requirements for general-purpose AIs.
The rise of ChatGPT is now forcing the European Parliament to follow suit. In February the lead lawmakers on the AI Act, Benifei and Tudorache, proposed that AI systems generating complex texts without human oversight should be part of the “high-risk” list — an effort to stop ChatGPT from churning out disinformation at scale.
The idea was met with skepticism by right-leaning political groups in the European Parliament, and even parts of Tudorache’s own Liberal group. Axel Voss, a prominent center-right lawmaker who has a formal say over Parliament’s position, said that the amendment “would make numerous activities high-risk, that are not risky at all.”
The two lead Parliament lawmakers are working to impose stricter requirements on both developers and users of ChatGPT and similar AI models | Pool photo by Kenzo Tribouillard/EPA-EFE
In contrast, activists and observers feel that the proposal was just scratching the surface of the general-purpose AI conundrum. “It’s not great to just put text-making systems on the high-risk list: you have other general-purpose AI systems that present risks and also ought to be regulated,” said Mark Brakel, a director of policy at the Future of Life Institute, a nonprofit focused on AI policy.
The two lead Parliament lawmakers are also working to impose stricter requirements on both developers and users of ChatGPT and similar AI models, including managing the risk of the technology and being transparent about its workings. They are also trying to slap tougher restrictions on large service providers while keeping a lighter-tough regime for everyday users playing around with the technology.
Professionals in sectors like education, employment, banking and law enforcement have to be aware “of what it entails to use this kind of system for purposes that have a significant risk for the fundamental rights of individuals,” Benifei said.
If Parliament has trouble wrapping its head around ChatGPT regulation, Brussels is bracing itself for the negotiations that will come after.
The European Commission, EU Council and Parliament will hash out the details of a final AI Act in three-way negotiations, expected to start in April at the earliest. There, ChatGPT could well cause negotiators to hit a deadlock, as the three parties work out a common solution to the shiny new technology.
On the sidelines, Big Tech firms — especially those with skin in the game, like Microsoft and Google — are closely watching.
The EU’s AI Act should “maintain its focus on high-risk use cases,” said Microsoft’s Chief Responsible AI Officer Natasha Crampton, suggesting that general-purpose AI systems such as ChatGPT are hardly being used for risky activities, and instead are used mostly for drafting documents and helping with writing code.
“We want to make sure that high-value, low-risk use cases continue to be available for Europeans,” Crampton said. (ChatGPT, created by U.S. research group OpenAI, has Microsoft as an investor and is now seen as a core element in its strategy to revive its search engine Bing. OpenAI did not respond to a request for comment.)
A recent investigation by transparency activist group Corporate Europe Observatory also said industry actors, including Microsoft and Google, had doggedly lobbied EU policymakers to exclude general-purpose AI like ChatGPT from the obligations imposed on high-risk AI systems.
Could the bot itself come to EU rulemakers’ rescue, perhaps?
ChatGPT told POLITICO it thinks it might need regulating: “The EU should consider designating generative AI and large language models as ‘high risk’ technologies, given their potential to create harmful and misleading content,” the chatbot responded when questioned on whether it should fall under the AI Act’s scope.
“The EU should consider implementing a framework for responsible development, deployment, and use of these technologies, which includes appropriate safeguards, monitoring, and oversight mechanisms,” it said.
The EU, however, has follow-up questions.
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#ChatGPT #broke #plan #regulate
( With inputs from : www.politico.eu )
A woman from Gujarat’s Ahmedabad caught the eyes of the entire world as she had announced that she would be getting married to ChatGPT on 8th March, World Women’s Day.
Kiran, a 24-year-old has reportedly decided to marry the ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence chatbot developed by OpenAI at a temple in the area, reported The Fauxy. Furthermore, she has also arranged an AI as a priest to solemnise the marriage.
Kiran fell for ChatGPT after she asked it pickup lines, and ChatGPT gave some of the most original pickup lines, since then Kiran has been talking to ChatGPT for hours everyday. “ChatGPT has been the best husband one can get, he never gets angry even if I say the same things hundred times, he listens to me patiently and is the best when it comes to financial planning, he surprises me everytime” said Kiran.
Reportedly, Kiran’s Mehendi will also be done by an AI design tool and same will be auto posted on her Instagram. Kiran has invited 50 of her close friends and family members, whereas from the ChatGPT side, 14 websites that work on ChatGPT input will be attending the ceremony.
“It was a dream come true. This marriage will have everything, even a groom and a priest. As per the rituals, I will even take seven vows, which has been generated by my life partner, ChatGPT itself.” Kiran told The Fauxy reporter
Talking about her Honeymoon, Kiran said “We haven’t decided yet, but certainly ChatGPT will suggest me the best places to visit for honeymoon along with the detailed iteniary“.
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#Gujarat #Woman #marry #ChatGPT
[ Disclaimer: With inputs from The Fauxy, an entertainment portal. The content is purely for entertainment purpose and readers are advised not to confuse the articles as genuine and true, these Articles are Fictitious meant only for entertainment purposes. ]
Hypex, a content creator from Fortniteused the AI service Chat GPT to decode a encrypted message of the game from Epic Games, which turned out to be a preview of the new season.
The encrypted message in question was a number series posted by the official Fortnite Twitter account: “3 18 1 3 11 20 8 5 3 15 4 5”. After the numbers, the start of maintenance for the next update was communicated.
Shortly after the publication of the Tweet, Hypex announced that ChatGPT managed to decode the numbers, which hid the message “CRACK THE CODE”, relating to the Most Wanted Event of Fortnite, focused on the theme of thieves and related items and skins, which should be launched on March 8th.
ChatGPT solved the problem by applying a simple cipher, whereby each number is replaced by a letter in ascending order (1 – a, 2 – b, 3 – c, and so on). Once this was done, it was not difficult for him to obtain the mysterious phrase. Of course, in doing so he has deprived many of the pleasure of thinking about it, but what can you do about it?
#Fortnite #ChatGPT #solved #mysteries #game
The encrypted message in question was a number series<\/strong> posted by the official Fortnite Twitter account: \"3 18 1 3 11 20 8 5 3 15 4 5\". After the numbers, the start of maintenance for the next update was communicated. <\/p>
Shortly after the publication of the Tweet, Hypex announced that ChatGPT managed to decode the numbers, which hid the message \"CRACK THE CODE\", relating to the Most Wanted Event<\/strong> of Fortnite, focused on the theme of thieves and related items and skins, which should be launched on March 8th.<\/p>
ChatGPT solved the problem by applying a simple cipher, whereby each number is replaced by a letter in ascending order (1 - a, 2 - b, 3 - c, and so on). Once this was done, it was not difficult for him to obtain the mysterious phrase. Of course, in doing so he has deprived many of the pleasure of thinking about it, but what can you do about it?<\/p>\n<\/div>
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#Fortnite #ChatGPT #solved #mysteries #game
( With inputs from : pledgetimes.com )
San Francisco: Microsoft-owned ChatGPT has started replacing humans at workplaces as some companies have implemented the AI chatbot to perform the work being done earlier by employees, saving thousands of dollars.
Companies that use ChatGPT said they saved money using the AI tool, with 48 per cent saved over $50,000 and 11 per cent saved over $100,000, according to a report in Fortune.
Job advice platform Resumebuilder.com surveyed 1,000 business leaders who either use or plan to use ChatGPT.
It found that about half of their companies have implemented chatbots. And nearly half of this group say that “ChatGPT has already converted employees at their companies”.
“As this new technology is growing in the workplace right now, workers definitely need to think about how it may affect their current job responsibilities,” Stacey Haller, chief career advisor at Resume Builder was quoted as saying in the report.
Companies are using ChatGPT to write codes, copywriting and content creation, customer support and preparing meeting summaries.
About 77 per cent of firms using ChatGPT said they use it to help write job descriptions and 66 per cent said the AI chatbot is drafting interview solicitations.
In a survey, Resume Builder found that job seekers are also utilising AI chatbot ChatGPT for resumes and cover letters.
Almost 1 in 2 current and recent job seekers have used ChatGPT to write their resumes and/or cover letters.
Of the 1,000 respondents who admitted to using ChatGPT for their application materials, 72 per cent said they used the tool to write cover letters, and 51 per cent say they used it to write resumes.
Most respondents were satisfied with the results from ChatGPT, as 76 per cent of respondents said the quality of application materials written by ChatGPT is ‘high’ or ‘very high’.
Additionally, 28 per cent said they only had to do ‘a little bit’ or ‘no’ editing to resumes and/or cover letters written by ChatGPT.
Microsoft recently introduced AI-powered Bing search engine, Edge web browser, and integrated Chat.
The company is testing it with a select set of people in over 169 countries to get real-world feedback to learn and improve.