Current:Home > ScamsChatGPT-maker OpenAI hosts its first big tech showcase as the AI startup faces growing competition -InvestSmart Insights
ChatGPT-maker OpenAI hosts its first big tech showcase as the AI startup faces growing competition
View
Date:2025-04-17 08:13:24
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The artificial intelligence company behind ChatGPT has invited hundreds of software developers to its first developer conference Monday, embracing a Silicon Valley tradition for technology showcases that Apple helped pioneer decades ago.
The path to OpenAI’s debut DevDay has been an unusual one. Founded as a nonprofit research institute in 2015, it catapulted to worldwide fame just under a year ago with the release of a chatbot that’s sparked excitement, fear and a push for international safeguards to guide AI’s rapid advancement.
The San Francisco conference comes a week after President Joe Biden signed an executive order that will set some of the first U.S. guardrails on AI technology.
Using the Defense Production Act, the order requires AI developers likely to include OpenAI, its financial backer Microsoft and competitors such as Google and Meta to share information with the government about AI systems being built with such “high levels of performance” that they could pose serious safety risks.
The order built on voluntary commitments set by the White House that leading AI developers made earlier this year.
A lot of expectation is also riding on the economic promise of the latest crop of generative AI tools that can produce passages of text and novel images, sounds and other media in response to written or spoken prompts.
Goldman Sachs projected last month that generative AI could boost labor productivity and lead to a long-term increase of 10% to 15% to the global gross domestic product — the economy’s total output of goods and services.
While not lacking in public attention, both positive and negative, Monday’s conference gives OpenAI an audience to showcase some of what it sees as the commercial benefits of its array of tools, which include ChatGPT, its latest large language model GPT-4, and the image-generator DALL-E.
The company recently announced a new version of its AI model called GPT-4 with vision, or GPT-4V, that enables the chatbot to analyze images. In a September research paper, the company showed how the tool could describe what’s in images to people who are blind or have low vision.
While some commercial chatbots, including Microsoft’s Bing, are now built atop OpenAI’s technology, there are a growing number of competitors including Bard, from Google, and Claude, from another San Francisco-based startup, Anthropic, led by former OpenAI employees. OpenAI also faces competition from developers of so-called open source models that publicly release their code and other aspects of the system for free.
ChatGPT’s newest competitor is Grok, which billionaire Tesla CEO Elon Musk unveiled over the weekend on his social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter. Musk, who helped start OpenAI before parting ways with the company, launched a new venture this year called xAI to set his own mark on the pace of AI development.
Grok is only available to a limited set of early users but promises to answer “spicy questions” that other chatbots decline due to safeguards meant to prevent offensive responses.
——
O’Brien reported from Providence, Rhode Island.
——-
The Associated Press and OpenAI have a licensing agreement that allows for part of AP’s text archives to be used to train the tech company’s large language model. AP receives an undisclosed fee for use of its content.
veryGood! (3245)
Related
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Steve Scalise and Jim Jordan running for House speaker as GOP race to replace McCarthy kicks off
- New rules aim to make foster care with family easier, provide protection for LGBTQ+ children
- $1.2 billion Powerball drawing nears after 11 weeks without a winner
- Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
- Chargers trade J.C. Jackson to Patriots, sending him back to where his career began, AP source says
- Wildfire smoke from Canada has drifted as far south as Florida
- Man arrested hours after rape and killing of 5-year-old girl in Kansas
- Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
- Julia Ormond sues Harvey Weinstein saying he assaulted her; accuses CAA, Disney, Miramax of enabling
Ranking
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Adults have a lot to say about book bans — but what about kids?
- The Masked Singer Reveals This Vanderpump Rules Scandoval Star as The Diver
- 1 dead after crane topples at construction site in Florida
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Pennsylvania mummy known as 'Stoneman Willie' identified after 128 years of mystery
- Duane Keffe D Davis, suspect charged in Tupac Shakur's murder, makes 1st court appearance
- Typhoon Koinu makes landfall in southern Taiwan, causing 190 injuries but no deaths
Recommendation
The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
Japan has issued a tsunami advisory after an earthquake near its outlying islands
America’s nonreligious are a growing, diverse phenomenon. They really don’t like organized religion
Russia launches more drone attacks as Ukrainian President Zelenskyy travels to a European forum
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
In Delaware's mostly white craft beer world, Melanated Mash Makers pour pilsners and build community
EV battery manufacturing energizes southern communities in Battery Belt
Bank on it: Phillies top Marlins in playoff opener, a win with a ring-fingered endorsement