As the OpenAI's newly unveiled ChatGPT machinery turns into a viral sensation, humans have started to discover some of the AI's biases, like the desire to wipe out humanity:
Yesterday, BleepingComputer ran a piece listing 10 coolest things you can do with ChatGPT. And, that doesn't even begin to cover all use cases like having the AI compose music for you [1, 2].
[...] As more and more netizens play with ChatGPT's preview, coming to surface are some of the cracks in AI's thinking as its creators rush to mend them in real time.
Included in the list is:
Also, from the New York Post:
ChatGPT's capabilities have sparked fears that Google might not have an online search monopoly for much longer.
"Google may be only a year or two away from total disruption," Gmail developer Paul Buchheit, 45, tweeted on December 1. "AI will eliminate the search engine result page, which is where they make most of their money."
"Even if they catch up on AI, they can't fully deploy it without destroying the most valuable part of their business!" Buchheit said, noting that AI will do to web search what Google did to the Yellow Pages.
Previously:
OpenAI's Text-Generating System GPT-3 Is Now Spewing Out 4.5 Billion Words a Day
A Robot Wrote This Entire Article. Are You Scared Yet, Human?
OpenAI's New Language Generator GPT-3 is Shockingly Good
(Score: 2, Interesting) by psa on Thursday December 08 2022, @11:05PM
The first half of this article is rather pointless. You can't make a general purpose text generator and then marvel that the resulting text includes things you don't like. Very odd. I can't wait for the demise of AI free speech that I'm sure some people are already plotting to go along with the inroads they're already making on human free speech.
The second half of the article isn't much more useful. Google has remained on top in search by aggressively adopting each new technology that could supplant that previous way that they were doing search. The moment they stop doing that they will be vulnerable. Will AI be that moment? Who knows. Most companies fall eventually, but it's ridiculously speculative to predict this particular failure until real competitors emerge and Google fails to anticipate them.