ChatGPT?-?What Do We Know And What We?Don't!
The OpenAI GPT story continues…

ChatGPT?-?What Do We Know And What We?Don't!

If you’re a tech enthusiast, you might have heard of OpenAI’s GPT-3 and the highly anticipated GPT-4.?

OpenAI is a non-profit research company founded by Elon Musk that aims to advance digital intelligence in such a way that it benefits humanity as a whole.

Launched in June 2020, GPT-3 is the third version of their “Generative Pre-trained Transformer” (GPT) model. The first GPT model was introduced in 2018, and the second version (GPT-2) was introduced in February 2019. In order to study how this new technology might be used for good, OpenAI granted access to many companies and individuals so they could explore its applications — but the organization retained control over what was done with the AI. GPT-3 has had a profound impact over the last few years and has birthed many startups chasing varied use cases, many that we discuss here — OpenAI’s GPT-3 Use Cases in 2023!

Although GPT-4 is not publicly available yet and is expected in 2023, its foreseeable impact has already been talked about widely across media platforms, and now more so than ever with the release of ChatGPT, or GPT 3.5 as some are calling it.?

GPT-3 is a natural language processing model developed by OpenAI, trained on a dataset of millions of web pages. It gives GPT-3 the capability to generate humanlike text for any given input prompt. The model was designed for use in conjunction with OpenAI’s existing GPT2 toolkit, an open-source natural language generation system backed by powerful deep neural networks that allow users to generate coherent text based on trainable knowledge bases and datasets.

A chatbot is a computer program that simulates human conversation, typically over the internet. Chatbots are used for a variety of purposes, including customer service and information retrieval.?

The first chatbot that was made available to the public was SmarterChild in 1999, which was created by Randy Schekman and David Levy. Since then many different types of chatbots have been developed with various levels of sophistication and utility. Some examples are:

  • Facebook Messenger bots that can help you find deals at nearby stores or restaurants
  • Alexa for shopping (Amazon), messaging (WhatsApp), phone calls (Google Home), and entertainment (Siri)
  • Microsoft Cortana for queries about weather forecasts or sports scores

Chatbots are becoming more sophisticated and can do things that were previously only possible by?humans.

This is a good thing; chatbots are already being used to reduce spam and help people find the information they need. But there’s also a dark side to this technology; chatbots can now generate human-like text and even learn from mistakes, creating fake news or passing themselves off as real people in online forums.

It’s easy for anyone with minimal technical knowledge to create their own chatbot — and many do, often without considering how it might be misused or abused by others with malicious intent.?

ChatGPT, a chatbot that works from within your web browser was launched last week by OpenAI. Everyone using it is learning what it can and can’t do. I did a little experimentation of my own.

ChatGPT can be used in many different ways, and it’s great to see how people are already using it. Here are just a few of the use cases being tested out there;

  • Answer questions, and validate answers articulately.
  • Give you ideas on what to write about and how.
  • Create quizzes, write-ups, and explanations.
  • Review and debug your code, fix and explain the fix.
  • Find security vulnerabilities in your code.
  • Just chat leisurely.
  • Ask to generate blog ideas, titles, captions, and more.
  • Code and execute small applications.

With its release last Wednesday, there are already a million users toying with ChatGPT. Currently, it’s not connected to the internet and it's working on the information on OpenAI’s servers, one reason being this is a user community test; moreover, it’s not at a point where it can’t generate fake stuff.

Some of its answers have been nonsensical and incorrect so far. Of course, it will respond based on the models it’s trained on. However, it does interact and responds in a very “human” way where the dialog is verbose and well articulated. It also tends to ask questions to clarify the initial ask.

There are definitely improvements in how you may have seen previous chatbots interact and respond and how ChatGPT does.

Why don’t you bring it up and try it out yourself @?chat.openai.com??

#planb #planbsuccess #artificialintelligence #ai #aieducation #machinelearning #openai #openapi #gpt3 #tech #futureofbusiness #futureoftech #futureofwork #futureoftechnology #chatbots #chat #chatgpt

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