- OpenAI may announce a new multimodal AI assistant on Monday, The Information reported.
- The technology could theoretically help automated customer service agents detect sarcasm.
- The new model can also be integrated into OpenAI’s chatbot ChatGPT.
Would You like a feature Interview?
All Interviews are 100% FREE of Charge
Would-be stand-up comedians and dissatisfied customers, take note. The robocall operator may not find your faceless insults funny in the future.
information Machine learning company OpenAI has reported that it may unveil a voice assistant with both audio and visual capabilities that could theoretically detect sarcasm.
finally.
The mysterious assistant could improve upon the automated customer service agent technology the company already offers, according to one person familiar with the new technology who spoke to The Information.
of AI assistant — Can talk to users and recognize objects and images — Of course, there could be many other features, the outlet reported, citing two people who have seen it in person. According to the report, these features include “deeper understanding of images and sounds” and “better logical reasoning.”
The technology is OpenAI’s planned livestream announcing GPT updates to be revealed as early as Monday technology.
“In theory, assistants could do things like act as tutors for students working on essays or math problems, or provide information about their surroundings when asked, such as translating or explaining signs. It has the potential to do a variety of things that are not possible today, “how to solve car problems,” the report states.
The new multimodal model is still prone to AI hallucinations, where the model spits out answers that have no basis in reality, people familiar with the model told The Information.
This new technology could eventually be integrated into the publicly available free version of OpenAI’s popular chatbot ChatGPT.
The Information reports that CEO Sam Altman will be reassigned due to this technology. We’re one step closer to creating a more useful AI assistant, similar to the virtual Samantha played by Scarlett Johansson in the movie “Her,” though we hope no one falls in love with it. (That wasn’t sarcasm.)
Representatives from OpenAI did not respond to requests for comment.