Nvidia, Google and hot startup OpenAI are turning to "synthetic data" factories amid demand for massive amounts of data needed to train artificial intelligence models.
Jaque Silva/NurPhoto via OpenAI’s o3 focuses on high-level reasoning, using a “private chain of thought” to solve problems. This approach allows it to perform well in physics, mathematics and science-related reasoning.
With the wide release of Sora, OpenAI's video tool, most of the big tech giants — and some startups — are now racing to create models capable of generating realistic, high-quality videos from text prompts.
There's not enough human-generated data to keep AI models improving at the same rate. 2025 will put a new solution to the test.
Google DeepMind is assembling a new team of artificial intelligence researchers to develop “world models” that can simulate physical environments. The initiative will be led by Tim Brooks, a former co-lead for OpenAI’s Sora project who joined DeepMind in October to work on Google’s video generation and world simulators.
The news is out, and it is catching the tech world’s attention: OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, is stepping into Google’s territory by launching a search engine. For years, Google has reigned as the dominant player in the search landscape, making any new entry with the potential to disrupt the industry a compelling story.
Despite costing users $200 per month, OpenAI’s ChatGPT Pro plan is actually losing the company money, according to a recent tweet fired off by CEO Sam Altman.
Sam Altman teased that the AGI and superintelligence are coming to ChatGPT soon, but we don't even have the next big GPT-5 upgrade.
OpenAI said it was developing a tool to let creators specify how they want their works to be included in — or excluded from — its AI training
Red teaming has become the go-to technique for iteratively testing AI models to simulate diverse, lethal, unpredictable attacks.
Once friends and business partners, and now rivals, Elon Musk and Sam Altman are dueling it out in a California federal courtroom. Their personal animus may impact the course of generative AI model development,