OpenAI faces an uphill climb as it argues that Indian courts cannot hear lawsuits about its U.S.-based business in the country, where Telegram has failed with similar defences and U.S. technology firms have faced government heat on compliance.
OpenAI may have billions of dollars in the bank. But it's gearing up to raise billions more, according to a Wall Street Journal report.
OpenAI thinks DeepSeek may have used its AI outputs inappropriately, highlighting ongoing disputes over copyright, fair use, and training data.
OpenAI itself has been accused of building ChatGPT by inappropriately accessing content it didn't have the rights to.
The Microsoft piece also goes over various flavors of distillation, including response-based distillation, feature-based distillation and relation-based distillation. It also covers two fundamentally different modes of distillation – off-line and online distillation.
OpenAI claims to have found evidence that Chinese AI startup DeepSeek secretly used data produced by OpenAI’s technology to improve their own AI models, according to the Financial Times. If true, DeepSeek would be in violation of OpenAI’s terms of service. In a statement, the company said it is actively investigating.
OpenAI has been cozying up to the government for a few years now, and it’s been turbocharged under the Trump Presidency. Earlier this week, Altman announced ChatGPT Gov, a specialized version of its chatbot for government applications.
As the U.S. races to be the best in the AI field, one of the researchers at the most prominent company, OpenAI, has quit.
The Japanese conglomerate is in talks to spend up to $43 billion to boost the ChatGPT developer.
Mark Zuckerberg’s confidence: The Meta chief executive officer predicted a “really big year” in which the social media company’s “highly intelligent and personalized AI assistant” will reach more than 1 billion people on its platforms.