Business World

Microsoft-backed OpenAI starts release of powerful artificial intelligen­ce known as GPT-4

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THE STARTUP OpenAI on Tuesday said it is beginning to release a powerful artificial intelligen­ce (AI) model known as GPT-4, setting the stage for human-like technology to proliferat­e and more competitio­n between its backer Microsoft Corp. and Alphabet, Inc.’s Google.

OpenAI, which created the chatbot sensation ChatGPT, said in a blog post that its latest technology is “multimodal,” meaning images as well as text prompts can spur it to generate content. The text-input feature will be available to ChatGPT Plus subscriber­s and to software developers, with a waitlist, while the imageinput ability remains a preview of its research. The highly-anticipate­d launch signals how office workers may turn to ever-improving AI for still more tasks, as well as how technology companies are locked in competitio­n to win business from such advances.

Alphabet, Inc.’s Google on Tuesday announced a “magic wand” for its collaborat­ion software that can draft virtually any document, days before Microsoft is expected to showcase AI for its competing Word processor, likely powered by OpenAI. A Microsoft executive also said that GPT-4 is helping power its Bing search engine.

OpenAI’s latest technology in some cases represente­d a vast improvemen­t on a prior version known as GPT-3.5, it said. In a simulation of the bar exam required of US law school graduates before profession­al practice, the new model scored around the top 10% of test takers, versus the older model ranking around the bottom 10%, OpenAI said.

While the two versions can appear similar in casual conversati­on, “the difference comes out when the complexity of the task reaches a sufficient threshold,” OpenAI said, noting “GPT-4 is more reliable, creative, and able to handle much more nuanced instructio­ns.”

An online demonstrat­ion of the technology by Greg Brockman, OpenAI’s president, showed it could take a photo of a hand-drawn mock-up for a simple website and create a real website based on it. GPT-4 also could help individual­s calculate their taxes, the demonstrat­ion showed.

Sam Altman, OpenAI’s chief executive, on Twitter called GPT-4 its model “most capable and aligned” with human values and intent, though “it is still flawed.”

Microsoft stands to benefit from GPT-4’s adoption, said Rishi Jaluria, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets. —

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