OpenAI révèle un nouveau Chatbot capable de voir les images uploadées

  • l’année dernière
OpenAI Unveils, New Chatbot That Can , 'See' Uploaded Images.
On March 14, the San Francisco tech
company behind ChatGPT announced a new
version of its artificial intelligence software.
On March 14, the San Francisco tech
company behind ChatGPT announced a new
version of its artificial intelligence software.
NBC reports that OpenAI said its new GPT-4 software , "can solve difficult problems with greater
accuracy, thanks to its broader general
knowledge and problem solving abilities.".
According to the company,
the AI has a variety of capabilities that
separate it from its previous iterations.
These include the ability
to process and "reason"
based on user-uploaded images.
GPT-4 is a large multimodal model
(accepting image and text inputs, emitting
text outputs) that, while less capable than
humans in many real-world scenarios,
exhibits human-level performance on various professional and academic benchmarks, Via OpenAI.com.
NBC reports that the latest version of ChatGPT is not
available for free, but it is available for people to try
on ChatGPT Plus, the company's subscription service.
NBC reports that the latest version of ChatGPT is not
available for free, but it is available for people to try
on ChatGPT Plus, the company's subscription service.
In 2015, OpenAI launched with funding
from tech industry leaders such as
Elon Musk, Peter Thiel and Reid Hoffman.
In 2015, OpenAI launched with funding
from tech industry leaders such as
Elon Musk, Peter Thiel and Reid Hoffman.
In 2015, OpenAI launched with funding
from tech industry leaders such as
Elon Musk, Peter Thiel and Reid Hoffman.
In 2015, OpenAI launched with funding
from tech industry leaders such as
Elon Musk, Peter Thiel and Reid Hoffman.
In 2015, OpenAI launched with funding
from tech industry leaders such as
Elon Musk, Peter Thiel and Reid Hoffman.
The advent of OpenAI's ChatGPT chatbot has sent shockwaves
throughout the tech sector and given rise to questions
of ethics and the regulation of a rapidly developing technology.
The release of OpenAI's chatbot has even
shaken up Google over concerns that AI tech
could impact its share of the search engine market.
The release of OpenAI's chatbot has even
shaken up Google over concerns that AI tech
could impact its share of the search engine market.
NBC reports that Sarah Myers West,
the managing director of the AI Now Institute,
warns that releasing systems like this without regulation , “is essentially experimenting in the wild.”

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