Tag: OpenAI

  • OpenAI Says It Can’t Control How Pentagon Uses Its AI, Reports Say

    OpenAI Says It Can’t Control How Pentagon Uses Its AI, Reports Say

    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman told employees on Tuesday that the company does not control how the US Department of Defense uses its artificial intelligence products in military operations and does not make operational decisions about their deployment, according to reports.

    Altman said while the Pentagon values OpenAI’s technical expertise and allows the company to apply its own safety measures, “you do not get to make operational decisions,” Bloomberg and CNBC reported, according to people familiar with the matter.

    The comments come amid intense scrutiny over the role of AI in warfare and ethical concerns among AI workers about its potential battlefield applications.

    The statement followed OpenAI’s recent agreement with the Pentagon, reached shortly after rival Anthropic PBC rejected a similar contract reportedly because of issues such as restrictions on mass domestic surveillance and autonomous weapons.

    Anthropic’s AI model Claude had been used by the US military in classified operations, including a reported operation against former Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in Venezuela.

    After Anthropic declined to revise its safeguards, OpenAI stepped in, and its models are now being deployed on classified networks.

  • OpenAI Wins Ksh.25.9 Billion US Defense Contract

    OpenAI Wins Ksh.25.9 Billion US Defense Contract

    ChatGPT maker OpenAI was awarded a $200 million (approximately Ksh.25.9 billion) contract to provide the U.S. Defense Department with artificial intelligence tools, the Pentagon said in a statement on Monday.

    “Under this award, the performer will develop prototype frontier AI capabilities to address critical national security challenges in both war fighting and enterprise domains,” the Pentagon said.

    OpenAI said last week that its annualized revenue run rate surged to $10 billion as of June, positioning the company to hit its full-year target amid booming AI adoption.

    OpenAI said in March it would raise up to $40 billion in a new funding round led by SoftBank Group (9984.T), at a $300 billion valuation. OpenAI had 500 million weekly active users as of the end of March.

    The White House’s Office of Management and Budget released new guidance in April directing federal agencies to ensure that the government and “the public benefit from a competitive American AI marketplace.”

    The guidance had exempted national security and defense systems.

    (Reuters)

  • OpenAI Unveils Chat GPT-4.5 with Advanced AI Capabilities

    OpenAI Unveils Chat GPT-4.5 with Advanced AI Capabilities

    OpenAI has introduced GPT-4.5, its most sophisticated AI language model yet, offering improved conversational abilities and greater emotional intelligence. The model is currently available to ChatGPT Pro subscribers, who pay $200 per month, as part of a research preview. OpenAI has announced plans to extend access to other subscription tiers in the near future.

    Designed to make interactions more natural and engaging, GPT-4.5 boasts enhanced conversational depth. However, its high computational demands make it costly to train and operate. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has attributed delays in the model’s full rollout to ongoing GPU shortages.

    Beyond improved dialogue capabilities, GPT-4.5 includes web search functionality, canvas integration, and support for file and image uploads. However, AI Voice Mode is not yet available. While GPT-4.5 surpasses its predecessors in language performance, it has been observed to lag behind smaller models like o3-mini in mathematics and science benchmarks.

    OpenAI aims to expand access to GPT-4.5 in the coming weeks, allowing more users to experience its advanced capabilities.

  • Elon Musk Launches Hostile Takeover Of OpenAI With Sh12.5 Trillion Bid

    Elon Musk Launches Hostile Takeover Of OpenAI With Sh12.5 Trillion Bid

    A consortium led by Elon Musk said on Monday it has offered $97.4 billion (Sh1.3 trillion) to buy the nonprofit that controls OpenAI, another salvo in the billionaire’s fight to block the artificial intelligence startup from transitioning to a for-profit firm.

    Musk’s bid is likely to ratchet up longstanding tensions with OpenAI CEO Sam Altman over the future of the ChatGPT maker at the heart of a boom in generative AI technology. Altman on Monday promptly posted on X: “no thank you but we will buy twitter for $9.74 billion (Sh1.3 trillion) if you want.”

    Musk cofounded OpenAI with Altman in 2015 as a nonprofit, but left before the company took off. He founded the competing AI startup xAI in 2023.

    Musk, the CEO of Tesla and owner of tech and social media company X, is a close ally of President Donald Trump. He spent more than a quarter of a billion dollars to help elect Trump, and leads the Department of Government Efficiency, a new arm of the White House tasked with radically shrinking the federal bureaucracy. Musk recently criticized a $500 billion (Sh 64.3 trillion) OpenAI-led project announced by Trump at the White House.

    OpenAI is now trying to transition into a for-profit from a nonprofit entity, which it says is required to secure the capital needed for developing the best AI models.

    Musk sued Altman and others in August last year, claiming they violated contract provisions by putting profit ahead of the public good in the push to advance AI. In November, he asked a US district judge for a preliminary injunction blocking OpenAI from converting to a for-profit structure.

    Musk’s lawsuit against OpenAI and Altman says the founders originally approached him to fund a nonprofit focused on developing AI to benefit humanity, but that it was now focused on making money.

    “It’s time for OpenAI to return to the open-source, safety-focused force for good it once was,” Musk said in a statement on Monday. “We will make sure that happens.”

    Altman told staff in a message that the company’s board of directors intends to make clear it has no interest in Musk’s “supposed bid“, according to a report by The Information on Monday.

    Musk and OpenAI backer Microsoft did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    The consortium led by Musk includes his AI startup xAI, Baron Capital Group, Emanuel Capital and others.

    xAI could merge with OpenAI following a deal, according to the Wall Street Journal, which first reported Musk’s offer earlier on Monday. xAI recently raised $6 billion from investors at a valuation of $40 billion, sources have told Reuters.

    ‘Throwing  a wrench’

    “This (bid) is definitely throwing a wrench in things,” said Jonathan Macey, a Yale Law School professor specializing in corporate governance.

    “The nonprofit is supposed to take money to do whatever good deeds, and if OpenAI prefers to sell it to somebody else for less money, it’s a concern for protecting the interests of the beneficiaries of the not-for-profit.”

    OpenAI was valued at $157 billion (Sh20.2 trillion) in its last funding round, cementing its status as one of the most valuable private companies in the world. SoftBank Group is in talks to lead a funding round of up to $40 billion in OpenAI at a valuation of $300 billion (Sh38.6 trillion), including the new funds, Reuters reported in January.

    Aside from any antitrust implications, a deal this size would need Musk and his consortium to raise enormous funds.

    Musk’s stock in Tesla is valued at roughly $165 billion (Sh21.2 trillion), according to LSEG data, but his leverage with banks is likely to be thin after his $44 billion buyout of X, which was then called Twitter, in 2022.

    To finance such a bid, Musk could sell part of his stake in Tesla or take a loan against his stake, or use his stake in rocket company SpaceX that is worth tens of billions of dollars as collateral, according to an uninvolved investment banker, who requested anonymity.

    “Musk’s offer to buy OpenAI’s nonprofit should significantly complicate OpenAI’s current fundraising and the process of converting into a for-profit corporation,” said Gil Luria, analyst at D.A. Davidson.

    “The offer seems to be backed by more credible investors … OpenAI may not be able to ignore it. It will be the fiduciary responsibility of OpenAI’s board to decide whether this is a better offer, which could call into question the offer from SoftBank.”

    (Reuters)

  • OpenAI Announces New ‘Deep Research’ Tool For ChatGPT

    OpenAI Announces New ‘Deep Research’ Tool For ChatGPT

    U.S. tech giant OpenAI on Monday unveiled a ChatGPT tool called “deep research” ahead of high-level meetings in Tokyo, as China’s DeepSeek chatbot heats up competition in the AI field.

    Artificial intelligence newcomer DeepSeek has sent Silicon Valley into a frenzy, with its high performance and supposed low cost prompting calls for US developers to go faster.

    OpenAI, whose ChatGPT fronted generative AI’s emergence into public consciousness in 2022, said its new tool “accomplishes in tens of minutes what would take a human many hours”.

    “Deep research is OpenAI’s next agent that can do work for you independently — you give it a prompt, and ChatGPT will find, analyze, and synthesize hundreds of online sources to create a comprehensive report at the level of a research analyst,” it said in a statement.

    In a live streamed video announcement, OpenAI researchers showed how the tool can synthesize web search data to help recommend ski equipment to buy for a snow holiday in Japan.

    OpenAI chief Sam Altman is in Tokyo to meet Japan’s Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba later Monday along with Masayoshi Son, head of Japanese tech investment behemoth SoftBank Group.

    SoftBank and OpenAI are part of the Stargate drive announced by US President Donald Trump to invest up to $500 billion in artificial intelligence infrastructure in the United States.

    Ishiba is expected to visit Washington to meet Trump for the leaders’ first in-person meeting later this week.

    – ‘New kind of hardware‘ –

    On Monday afternoon, Altman and Son will hold a forum in Tokyo with around 500 businesses at which they are expected to announce plans to boost Japan’s AI infrastructure.

    The Nikkei business daily reported that this will include building AI data centres and power plants to run them, without specifying the scale of the investment required.

    Separately, Altman told the Nikkei he wants to develop “a new kind of hardware” using artificial intelligence in partnership with Apple’s former chief design officer Jony Ive.

    But Altman indicated that it would take several years to unveil a prototype, the Nikkei said.

    Altman also told the newspaper that DeepSeek is “a good model” that highlights the serious competition for AI reasoning technology, but that its “capability level isn’t new”.

    DeepSeek’s performance has sparked a wave of accusations that it has reverse-engineered the capabilities of leading US technology, such as the AI powering ChatGPT.

    Last week OpenAI warned that Chinese companies are actively attempting to replicate its advanced AI models, prompting closer cooperation with US authorities.

    (AFP)

  • US Tech Giants Announce AI Plan Worth Up To $500bn

    US Tech Giants Announce AI Plan Worth Up To $500bn

    OpenAI is teaming up with Oracle and Softbank to build data centres equipped to power artificial intelligence (AI), with plans to invest $100bn “immediately”.

    Flanked by the bosses of the three companies at the White House, US President Donald Trump said the plan is a “resounding declaration of confidence in America’s potential”.

    OpenAI has previously called for major investments in infrastructure to support AI and pushed for government support of those plans.

    The ChatGPT-creator and Softbank said the joint venture, dubbed Stargate, intends to invest $500bn over the next four years.

    “I think this will be the most important project of this era,” said OpenAI’s chief executive, Sam Altman.

    “We wouldn’t be able to do this without you, Mr President,” he added, crediting Trump despite work on the project already being under way.

    The plan, which involves the construction of AI infrastructure such as data centres, is expected to create more than 100,000 jobs, according to Trump.

    Oracle’s chief technology office, Larry Ellison, said the first data centres are under construction in Texas and more will be built in other locations.

    The Information, a technology news website, first reported on the project in March last year.

    OpenAI said the announcement of the new company, which also includes UAE-backed investor MGX, was the culmination of more than a year’s worth of conversations.

    Other partners in the project include tech giants Microsoft, Arm and NVIDIA, according to statements by Softbank and OpenAI.

    OpenAI kicked off the AI race in 2022 with the launch of its ChatGPT bot, which offered lifelike responses to questions and showcased the rapid advances in the technology.

    It has prompted a gush of investment, including in the specialised data centres needed to power the computing.

    But the projected surge in demand for the centres, which will require huge amounts of power to run and money to be built, has raised concerns about the impact on energy supplies and questions about the role of foreign investors.

    In one of his final acts in the White House, former President Joe Biden put forward rules that would restrict exports of AI-related chips to dozens of countries around the world, saying the move would help the US control the industry.

    He also issued orders related to the development of data centres on government land, which spotlighted a role for clean energy in powering the centres.

    The latest investment plans are not unusual in the context of the industry.

    Microsoft, one of the OpenAI’s major backers, said earlier this month it was on track to invest $80bn to build out AI-powered data centres this year.

    It is also involved in a $100bn venture that includes BackRock and is focused on making AI data centre investments.

    Amazon has been pouring money into the space at a similar scale, announcing two projects worth about $10bn each just in the last two months.

    In a report last year, McKinsey said that global demand for data centre capacity would more than triple by 2030, growing between 19% and 27% annually by 2030.

    For developers to meet that demand, the consultancy estimated that at least twice the capacity would have to be built by 2030 as has been constructed since 2000.

    But analysts have warned that the process is likely to be bogged down by issues such as power and land constraints and permitting.

    (BBC)

  • OpenAI Whistleblower Found Dead In San Francisco Apartment

    OpenAI Whistleblower Found Dead In San Francisco Apartment

    An OpenAI researcher-turned-whistleblower has been found dead in an apartment in San Francisco, authorities said.

    The body of Suchir Balaji, 26, was discovered on 26 November after police said they received a call asking officers to check on his wellbeing.

    The San Francisco medical examiner’s office determined his death to be suicide and police found no evidence of foul play.

    In recent months Mr Balaji had publicly spoken out against artificial intelligence company OpenAI’s practices, which has been fighting a number of lawsuits relating to its data-gathering practices.

    In October, the New York Times published an interview with Mr Balaji in which he alleged that OpenAI had violated US copyright law while developing its popular ChatGPT online chatbot.

    The article said that after working at the company for four years as a researcher, Mr Balaji had come to the conclusion that “OpenAI’s use of copyrighted data to build ChatGPT violated the law and that technologies like ChatGPT were damaging the internet”.

    OpenAI says its models are “trained on publicly available data”.

    Mr Balaji left the company in August, telling the New York Times he had since been working on personal projects.

    He grew up in Cupertino, California, before going to study computer science at the University of California, Berkeley.

    A spokesperson for OpenAI said in a statement cited by CNBC News that it was “devastated to learn of this incredibly sad news today and our hearts go out to Suchir’s loved ones during this difficult time”.

    US and Canadian news publishers, including the New York Times, and a group of best-selling writers, including John Grisham, have filed lawsuits claiming the company was illegally using news articles to train its software.

    OpenAI told the BBC in November its software is “grounded in fair use and related international copyright principles that are fair for creators and support innovation”.

  • Google Launches New Artificial Intelligence Model Gemini 1.5 Flash

    Google Launches New Artificial Intelligence Model Gemini 1.5 Flash

    Google on Tuesday introduced its new artificial intelligence (AI) model that it said is faster and more efficient for AI assistants.

    The new Gemini 1.5 Flash model is lighter-weight than its predecessor Gemini 1.5 Pro which was introduced in February, following the first natively multimodal Gemini 1.0 that was launched in December 2023.

    Google dubbed Gemini 1.5 Flash as a lightweight model that is optimized for speed and efficiency, which is suitable for the vast majority of developer and enterprise use cases.

    It has a long-context understanding that can process hours of video and audio, and hundreds of thousands of words or lines of code, according to the company.

    “Flash has a one-million-token context window by default, which means you can process one hour of video, 11 hours of audio, codebases with more than 30,000 lines of code, or over 700,000 words,” according to its website.

    Developers can integrate Gemini models into their applications with Google AI Studio and Google Cloud Vertex AI.

    Gemini 1.5 Flash by Google came a day after Microsoft-backed OpenAI unveiled its new model GPT-4o which is said to be much faster compared to its previous ones, as the competition in the AI industry heats up.

    Google in late February had temporarily suspended Gemini’s ability to generate images after receiving criticism on social media platforms.

  • ChatGPT Maker OpenAI Unveils New AI Model GPT-40

    ChatGPT Maker OpenAI Unveils New AI Model GPT-40

    ChatGPT maker OpenAI said on Monday it would release a new AI model called GPT-4o, capable of realistic voice conversation and able to interact across text and image, its latest move to stay ahead in a race to dominate the emerging technology.

    New audio capabilities enable users to speak to ChatGPT and obtain real-time responses with no delay, as well as interrupt ChatGPT while it is speaking, both hallmarks of realistic conversations that AI voice assistants have found challenging, the OpenAI researchers showed at a livestream event.

    “It feels like AI from the movies … Talking to a computer has never felt really natural for me; now it does,” OpenAI CEO Sam Altman wrote in a blog post.

    Reuters Graphics

    Microsoft-backed OpenAI faces growing competition and pressure to expand the user base of ChatGPT, its popular chatbot product that wowed the world with its ability to produce human-like written content and top-notch software code.

    At the livestream event, OpenAI researchers showed off ChatGPT’s new voice assistant capabilities. In one demo, ChatGPT used its vision and voice capabilities to talk a researcher through solving a math equation on a sheet of paper.

    In another demo, researchers showed the GPT-4o model’s capability of real-time language translation.
    OpenAI’s demonstrations verged on science-fiction, with ChatGPT and its interlocutor at one point engaging in coquettish banter.

    The OpenAI researcher told the chatbot he was in a great mood because he was demonstrating “how useful and amazing you are.”

    Altman posted on X after the demo, “her,” in what appeared to be a reference to the so named 2013 film by Spike Jonze about a man falling in love with his AI assistant, voiced by Scarlett Johansson.

    OpenAI’s chief technology officer, Mira Murati, said at the event that the new model would be offered for free because it is more cost-effective than the company’s previous models. Paid users of GPT-4o will have greater capacity limits than the company’s free users, she said. The GPT-4o model will be available in ChatGPT over the next few weeks, the company said.

    ChatGPT responded: “Oh stop it! You’re making me blush!”

    In addition, free ChatGPT users now have access to a “browse” feature that enables ChatGPT to display up-to-date information from the web, Murati told Reuters after the event. The company does not intend to make money off free users through selling ads, Murati said.

    Shortly after launching in late 2022, ChatGPT was called the fastest application ever to reach 100 million monthly active users. However, worldwide traffic to ChatGPT’s website has been on a roller-coaster ride in the past year and is only now returning to its May 2023 peak, according to analytics firm Similarweb, opens new tab.

    OpenAI made the announcements a day before Alphabet is scheduled to hold its annual Google developers’ conference, where it is expected to show off its own new AI-related features.

    Reuters reported last week that OpenAI planned to announce an AI-powered search product, citing sources. But the company decided to delay the search product announcement, according to one source familiar with the matter.
    Shares of Alphabet were down 0.4% on Monday afternoon, after falling nearly 3% earlier in the day. Microsoft shares were down 0.2%.

  • Reddit Share Sale Values The Platform At $6.4B

    Reddit Share Sale Values The Platform At $6.4B

    Reddit has priced its shares at the top of a marketed range, valuing the social media platform at $6.4 billion.

    It has raised $748m as it sells 22 million shares for $34 each, making it one of the biggest initial public offerings (IPO) by a social media firm.

    The shares will start trading on the New York stock exchange on Thursday.

    In an unusual move the company offered some of the shares to the platform’s users, although it has not been disclosed how many took up the offer.

    Reddit was founded almost 20 years ago and has become one of the most popular websites in the world.

    It is an online forum where users can discuss topics that interest them. As of the end of December 2023 it had more than 73 million users, according to the company.

    But the filing brings to the forefront a question that has been bubbling for years behind the scenes – how can a business make money from what is, essentially, random conversations.

    People do not pay to use Reddit – the website is completely free for people to browse, post and comment.

    For 20 years it couldn’t turn a profit, and some might ask why Reddit is worth billions if it has not ever made money.

    It has tried a few things, and a significant visual change in 2017 made the website more friendly to advertisers.

    But it seems Reddit’s road to profitability has an end in sight, built around AI models.

    That is because companies like OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, will pay for data of those random conversations.

    Google is believed to have paid Reddit $60m for the right to scan almost two decades of discussions to make its AI more human-like – and Reddit has said it has agreed licensing deals worth more than $200m over the next two to three years.

    In February, Reddit said it lost $90.8m in 2023, so the money from artificial intelligence (AI) firms could make the platform profitable.

    Inquiries and accusations

    But there are also plenty of concerns on Reddit’s horizon too.

    For one thing, the social media platform is facing increased scrutiny from regulators.

    The US Federal Trade Commission (FTC) is already looking into how Reddit licences its data for AI models – generally speaking, regulators don’t like it when big technology firms sell data generated by users.

    While the platform may have seen that coming, it may have been blindsided by a challenge from mobile phone firm Nokia, which is accusing it of infringing on its patents.

    “We will evaluate their claims,” Reddit said, adding that it’s faced similar accusations in the past.

    Perhaps most significant of all is that Reddit’s filing with the US financial markets regulator, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), notes its users as a potential risk that comes with owning shares in the company.

    “If we fail to increase or retain our user base or if user engagement declines, our business… and prospects will be harmed,” it said in the filing.

    “If Redditors do not continue to contribute content or their contributions are not valuable or appealing to other Redditors, we may experience a decline in the number of Redditors accessing our products and services… which could result in the loss of advertisers.”

    Reddit’s user base has been known to react with frustration to changes made on the platform.

    Such is their distaste for changes made in recent years, a search on the platform for chief executive Steve Huffman – username u/spez – shows that when Redditors mention him the comments are usually preceded by foul language.

    Despite growing discontent, threats to leave the platform – such as the blackout that rendered much of Reddit unusable in 2023 – have often proved short-lived.

    And although there have been efforts to create an alternative platform, one of Reddit’s biggest pluses is something it does not have – a significant rival.

    While there may be concerns from Redditors, the social media platform seems to be on relatively safe ground when it ties its stock market value to its users, so long as there is nowhere else for them to go.

    -BBC

  • Apple, Google In Talks To Bring Gemini AI To iPhones

    Apple, Google In Talks To Bring Gemini AI To iPhones

    Cupertino-based tech giant Apple is in talks with Google to bring Gemini artificial intelligence (AI) engine to iPhones, a Bloomberg report said on Monday.

    According to the report, the iPhone maker recently also had discussions with OpenAI, the developer of the immensely popular ChatGPT, for a possible licensing of their AI model.

    If a deal on Gemini is reached, the two companies’ long-running partnership will deepen even though they will continue to rival each other in the smartphone realm with their Android and iOS operating systems.

    Despite being direct competitors there, Google and Apple have had a mutualistic relationship as the former pays the latter billions of dollars every year to keep Google Search as the default in iPhones’ Safari browsers.

    Being a secretive company, Apple has not so far talked about its own work on AI engines but has clearly fallen behind in the AI race despite massively popularizing it with the release of the iPhone 4S, which came packed with AI-based virtual assistant Siri in late 2011.

    After 13 years, the capabilities of Siri have seen only an incremental increase while Google Assistant has proven to be invaluable for Android users.

    A report by 9To5Mac news website claimed that the Siri code “is now a mess” beyond salvage due to the fact that Apple has kept its original code and only made additions to it after acquiring the namesake app – rather than “actually working on a new version of it.”

    “The result is that the Siri code is now a mess, and what many sources say is that no one at Apple really wants to be the one to change it,” 9To5Mac’s Filipo Esposito said in the report.

  • OpenAI introduces AI Model ‘Sora’ That Turns Text Into Video

    OpenAI introduces AI Model ‘Sora’ That Turns Text Into Video

    Microsoft-backed OpenAI is developing software capable of generating minute-long videos based on text prompts, the company announced on Thursday.

    The software, named “Sora” after the Japanese word for “sky,” is currently available for red teaming, which helps identify flaws in the AI system. Additionally, it is intended for use by visual artists, designers, and filmmakers to provide feedback on the model, the company stated.

    “Sora is able to generate complex scenes with multiple characters, specific types of motion, and accurate details of the subject and background,” the statement said, adding that it can create multiple shots within a single video.

    In addition to generating videos from text prompts, Sora can also animate a still image, as mentioned in a blog post by the company.

    The video generation software follows OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot, which was released in late 2022 and created a buzz around generative AI with its ability to compose emails and write codes and poems.

    Social media giant Meta Platforms beefed up its image generation model Emu last year to add two AI-based features that can edit and generate videos from text prompts. The Facebook-parent company is also looking to compete with Microsoft, Alphabet’s Google and Amazon in the rapidly transforming generative AI universe.

    Sora is still a work-in-progress, with the company acknowledging that the model may sometimes struggle with spatial details in a prompt and encounter difficulties in following a specific camera trajectory.

    OpenAI also mentioned that they are developing tools to determine whether a video was generated by Sora.

    The new tool is not yet publicly available, and OpenAI has disclosed limited information about its development process. The company, which has faced lawsuits from some authors and The New York Times over its use of copyrighted works to train ChatGPT, has not revealed the imagery and video sources used to train Sora.

    OpenAI mentioned in a blog post that it is consulting with artists, policymakers and other stakeholders before releasing the new tool to the public.

    “We are working with red teamers  –  domain experts in areas like misinformation, hateful content, and bias   –  who will be adversarially testing the model,” the company said. “We’re also building tools to help detect misleading content such as a detection classifier that can tell when a video was generated by Sora.”