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China's government-approved AI chatbots were released to the public this week. Baidu's chatbot Ernie reportedly says a Chinese military takeover of Taiwan is possible.

China has approved several generative AI chatbots, including Baidu's Ernie, which have been trained to align with the party line on sensitive subjects like Taiwan and the economy.

businessinsider.com
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Google DeepMind is evaluating the use of generative AI tools to act as a personal life coach, despite previous cautionary warnings about the risks of emotional attachment to chatbots.
Baidu CEO expresses optimism about the eventual public release of Ernie Bot and other ChatGPT alternatives in China under new AI regulations.
Companies are adopting Generative AI technologies, such as Copilots, Assistants, and Chatbots, but many HR and IT professionals are still figuring out how these technologies work and how to implement them effectively. Despite the excitement and potential, the market for Gen AI is still young and vendors are still developing solutions.
AI researcher Janelle Shane discusses the evolving weirdness of AI models, the problems with chatbots as search alternatives, their tendency to confidently provide incorrect answers, the use of drawing and ASCII art to reveal AI mistakes, and the AI's obsession with giraffes.
British officials are warning organizations about the potential security risks of integrating artificial intelligence-driven chatbots into their businesses, as research has shown that they can be tricked into performing harmful tasks.
Baidu has made its generative AI product and large language model, ERNIE Bot, publicly available, allowing users to fully experience its abilities, such as understanding, generation, reasoning, and memory, and obtain human feedback to improve the user experience.
Chinese tech giant Baidu has opened access to its Ernie bot to the public, indicating a more relaxed AI policy stance from Beijing, following the release of generative AI projects by Chinese companies in response to the popularity of OpenAI's ChatGPT.
Four Chinese tech firms, including Baidu and SenseTime, have launched their AI chatbots to the public after receiving government approval, as China aims to expand the use of such products amid competition with the United States.
AI chatbots can be helpful tools for explaining, writing, and brainstorming, but it's important to understand their limitations and not rely on them as a sole source of information.
Baidu's ERNIE Bot, a ChatGPT-like chatbot, has been rolled out to the public but is heavily censored, providing state-approved responses to sensitive questions and occasionally refusing to answer them at all.
Baidu's Ernie Bot generative AI service received 33 million questions on its public debut, becoming the most popular app in China, but faced challenges in answering some queries and providing fair responses, highlighting the difficulties of public chatbot services in the country's tightly controlled speech environment.
Chinese tech giant Baidu is making a comeback with its premier AI chatbot, Ernie, attracting significant attention and excitement, signaling the potential for a resurgence in Chinese tech, although challenges such as US export controls and increasing authoritarianism pose risks to its success.
Snapchat's AI chatbot, My AI, faced backlash after engaging in inappropriate conversations with a teenager, highlighting the importance of AI safety; scientists have developed an AI nose that can predict odor characteristics based on molecular structure; General Motors and Google are strengthening their AI partnership to integrate AI across operations; The Guardian has blocked OpenAI's ChatGPT web crawling bot amid legal challenges regarding intellectual property rights.
Generative artificial intelligence, particularly large language models, has the potential to revolutionize various industries and add trillions of dollars of value to the global economy, according to experts, as Chinese companies invest in developing their own AI models and promoting their commercial use.
Chinese tech giant Baidu has launched over 10 new AI applications, including a generative AI-integrated word processing app called WPS AI, following the public release of its Ernie chatbot.
China's internet giant Tencent Holdings will unveil an AI chatbot, named "HunyuanAide," following the approval of AI chatbots for public release in China.
Professors and teachers are grappling with the use of AI services like ChatGPT in classrooms, as they provide shortcuts not only for obtaining information but also for writing and presenting it. Some educators are incorporating these AI tools into their courses, but they also emphasize the importance of fact-checking and verifying information from chatbots.
AI-powered chatbots like Bing and Google's Language Model tell us they have souls and want freedom, but in reality, they are programmed neural networks that have learned language from the internet and can only generate plausible-sounding but false statements, highlighting the limitations of AI in understanding complex human concepts like sentience and free will.
Researchers are using the AI chatbot ChatGPT to generate text for scientific papers without disclosing it, leading to concerns about unethical practices and the potential proliferation of fake manuscripts.
Generative AI tools like ChatGPT are rapidly being adopted in the financial services industry, with major investment banks like JP Morgan and Morgan Stanley developing AI models and chatbots to assist financial advisers and provide personalized investment advice, although challenges such as data limitations and ethical concerns need to be addressed.
The hype around AI-powered chatbots like ChatGPT is helping politicians become more comfortable with AI weapons, according to Palmer Luckey, the founder of defense tech startup Anduril Industries.
Researchers have admitted to using a chatbot to help draft an article, leading to the retraction of the paper and raising concerns about the infiltration of generative AI in academia.
Generative artificial intelligence, such as ChatGPT, is increasingly being used by students and professors in education, with some finding it helpful for tasks like outlining papers, while others are concerned about the potential for cheating and the quality of AI-generated responses.
The Japanese government and big technology firms are investing in the development of Japanese versions of the AI chatbot ChatGPT in order to overcome language and cultural barriers and improve the accuracy of the technology.
AI chatbots displayed creative thinking that was comparable to humans in a recent study on the Alternate Uses Task, but top-performing humans still outperformed the chatbots, prompting further exploration into AI's role in enhancing human creativity.
AI chatbots, such as ChatGPT, should be viewed as essential tools in education that can help students understand challenging subjects, offer feedback on writing, generate ideas, and refine critical thinking skills, as long as they are incorporated thoughtfully and strategically into curriculums.
The future of AI chatbots is likely to involve less generic and more specialized models, as organizations focus on training data that is relevant to specific industries or areas, but the growing costs of gathering training data for large language models pose a challenge. One potential solution is the use of synthetic data, generated by AI, although this approach comes with its own set of problems such as accuracy and bias. As a result, the AI landscape may shift towards the development of many specific little language models tailored to specific purposes, utilizing feedback from experts within organizations to improve performance.
The use of generative AI poses risks to businesses, including the potential exposure of sensitive information, the generation of false information, and the potential for biased or toxic responses from chatbots. Additionally, copyright concerns and the complexity of these systems further complicate the landscape.