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In the past six months, no innovation, no technology product, has had a greater cultural impact than OpenAI’s ChatGPT.
of microsoftA startup backed by Generative Artificial Intelligence Chatbot wowed consumers when it debuted at the end of November. It turns out that the ability of humans to seamlessly interact with her AI has improved by leaps and bounds, giving the AI access to the entire information universe of the internet.
AI is having its iPhone moment. From Uber to Instagram, Apple’s breakthrough products have sparked the invention of new ecosystems of apps that bring new services to users. Because suddenly I had a computer in my pocket. Coinciding with that mobile revolution was a computing revolution with the exponential power to move data to the cloud.
We are currently seeing a similar tech boom, especially around AI. It’s not just the amazing experience of interacting with modern chatbots. AI will impact, disrupt, and accelerate every industry. In fact it has already happened.
With OpenAI topping this year’s Disruptor 50 list, there’s no question that artificial intelligence is the dominant theme, not just in the annual rankings, but across the venture-backed tech startup space.
And it’s not just businesses that have AI at their core. Various enterprise applications of AI are driving efficiencies and new capabilities across sectors of enterprises and markets. Twenty-one of the 50 companies on this year’s list say AI is very important to more than 50% of their revenue.
Half of the top 10 companies on the 2023 CNBC Disruptors 50 list feature key AI applications, notably representing a range of industries and use cases. His third-place Canva integrates ChatGPT into its design tools, giving customers new ways to get creative. No. 4 Disruptor Relativity Space uses AI to build 3D printed rockets. No. 7 Disruptor Anduril Industries deploys AI to identify and attack security threats. UK-based renewable energy company Octopus Energy (#8 on this year’s list) uses AI to efficiently match energy demand and supply. No. 9 Lineage Logistics uses AI to optimize the movement of goods across temperature-controlled supply chains.
In an interview with CNBC late last week, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said, “I think we’re deep into a new wave of tech. This is the biggest one in a while. I think.
Scale AI, number 19 on the Disruptor 50 list, is working with companies like OpenAI to transform the massive amounts of data (images, text, audio, video) that machines need to digest to become better learners. labeled. Also included in this list is Cohere, the No. 44 Disruptor. Cohere was founded by former Google Brain researchers who helped develop Transformers, a new method of natural language processing that allows systems to better understand the context of words.
Altman said OpenAI sees artificial intelligence impacting nearly every industry. He cited the legal profession as a prime example.
“What we hear from customers using our API for Law Firms is that it has completely transformed the way they work, the efficiency and accuracy that a single attorney can achieve, and the way people It just means we can do more of what we’re really good at, and we’re going to use this new tool to give us as much leverage as possible,” said Altman.
“This is a pattern we see again and again in many industries and we are very excited about it,” he said.
OpenAI CEO Sam Altman speaks at a keynote announcing ChatGPT integration into Bing at Microsoft on February 7, 2023 in Redmond, Washington.
Jason Redmond | AFP | Getty Images
Its ability to scare stock market investors became apparent when alphabetshares plunged after ChatGPT competitor Bard rolled out earlier this year. And in education, one of the sectors where generative AI risks are seen as his most acute, Chegg’s share price fell by nearly half because the CEO said on a recent earnings call that his ChatGPT Because we mentioned the impact it has on customer growth.
For now, OpenAI has two revenue streams. An enterprise software model that charges companies for access to the platform, and a premium his chat app that offers consumers $20 a month on top of the free version.
“We are very happy with these two models so far, and we are very open about other things,” says Altman.
OpenAI’s enterprise customers include Salesforce, Snapchat, and its backer Microsoft. Microsoft brings OpenAI’s generative AI technology to the Bing and Edge internet browsers and the Microsoft 365 business software suite (Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and more).
Microsoft’s cumulative investment in OpenAI has ballooned to $13 billion, with the startup’s reported valuation reaching $29 billion. The company declined to provide any funding or valuation data.
The growth of AI power is so rapid and dramatic that it has caused concern among politicians and regulators. Those looking to make their mark in the space have also spoken of the risks, including Elon Musk, an early co-founder of OpenAI who now says he will launch a competitor. Musk, along with Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak and various professors and his CEO, in March he signed an open letter from the Future of Life Institute stating that OpenAI’s GPT-4 is more powerful than his We have asked the AI Lab to stop training such models.
Attending a virtual event at MIT, Altman said that although there should be consistent safety guidelines, the proposed pause “is largely devoid of technical nuance as to where the pause should be.” rice field.
Altman continues to advocate regulation. “We really need regulation here. We’ve been asking for regulation since the company was founded,” he said. “I think we’re going to have some regulation. There will be more over time. And I think that’s very important. So I’m happy that it’s happening.”
“I think we’re going to get to a future where we make the most of AI and minimize the very bad uses of AI,” Altman said. An industry with far less powerful technology. So we definitely should have it here.
Reid Hoffman, a partner at venture capital firm Greylock, was an early investor in OpenAI and is now an investor in many AI companies, as well as co-founder of AI startup Inflection. He said some critics feel he is more dangerous than OpenAI.
Hoffman, who is also a Microsoft board member and former OpenAI board member, said: interest. “Some of it isn’t very well-intentioned: ‘Guys, slow down so I can speed up’.” In fact, the call to slow down is less secure than what they’re proposing,” he said, referring to OpenAI and Altman.
In addition to concerns that AI is being used to manipulate or mislead, Altman said he is working to curb bias within OpenAI’s system.
“A big part of that is what we call RLHF, or reinforcement learning from human feedback, and it’s possible to use these models that have been pre-trained on the vast majority of the internet and push them in a certain way. You can,” said Altman. “We can teach the model to say, ‘The data is biased. It shouldn’t behave like this.'” Reduce bias in the model.
Companies, including OpenAI, are fighting stigma and driving smart regulation, while working with established tech giants like Microsoft and leaders in every industry to help them evolve, so there is no confusion. is not.
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