OpenAI's AI chatbot platform, ChatGPT, suffered a major outage Thursday. But the company claims that service has been restored.
By Aditya Kalra, Arpan Chaturvedi and Munsif Vengattil NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Indian book publishers and their international counterparts have filed a copyright lawsuit against OpenAI in New Delhi, a representative said on Friday,
ChatGPT, the massively popular conversational chatbot, was down for a short time before the issue was resolved, according to an OpenAI status update.
The secondhand marketplace says consumers are already reaping the benefits of the AI-enabled customer service tool.
The artificial intelligence (AI) company has acknowledged there is a major outage and is working to resolve the issue after a huge spike in reported disruptions. View on euronews
The new tool, called Operator, can shop for groceries or book a restaurant reservation. But it still needs help from humans.
OpenAI has rolled out new ChatGPT changes designed to humanize the AI-powered chatbot and add levels of personalization and customization.
Alongside its big public push for AI investments, the U.K. government is also playing a virtual card to catapult itself into the 21st century. Today it
Proponents say ChatGPT could reinvent online search engines and could assist with research, information writing, content creation and customer service chatbots. However, the service has at times become controversial, with some critics raising concerns that ChatGPT and similar programs fuel online misinformation and enable students to plagiarize.
Meta activated an urgent status to fix the problem of its AI chatbots saying Joe Biden is still the president this week, according to a report. On Thursday, Meta’s artificial intelligence bots across Facebook,
Indian book publishers and their international counterparts have filed a copyright lawsuit against OpenAI in New Delhi, a representative said on Friday, the latest in a series of global cases seeking to stop the ChatGPT chatbot accessing proprietary content.