What's happening in the World of AI? (Vol 20)
Sohail Shaik
Senior Data Scientist | LLM | AWS | TensorFlow | Machine Learning | AI | GPT | Llama | LangChain | Neural Networks | Spark | Kafka | PySpark | NLP | Python | DynamoDB | PostgreSQL | Zeppelin | SQL | Neo4j | RAG systems
In this week's newsletter, I am going to talk about:
So, let's dive right into it!
1. Indian LLM within five months under $5million
Context: Sam Altman once challenged that India companies should not waste their resources in building their own LLMs because of budget and computation constraints.
CP Gurnani, former CEO of Tech Mahindra and founder of AIonOS, credited OpenAI's Sam Altman for inspiring the development of an Indian large-language model (LLM) within five months and under $5 million.
This LLM can communicate in around 40 local languages and dialects. Gurnani highlighted the significance of this achievement at the MachineCon GCC Summit in Bangalore.
Despite Altman's earlier skepticism about competing with OpenAI on a $10 million budget, Gurnani emphasized India's growing capabilities in AI and semiconductors.
2. ChatGPT just (accidentally) shared all of its secret rules
ChatGPT accidentally revealed OpenAI's internal instructions to a user who shared the discovery on Reddit.
When greeted with a simple "Hi," the chatbot disclosed detailed system instructions about its safety and ethical boundaries.
These included guidelines for DALL-E, the AI image generator, which limits image creation to one per request and avoids copyright infringement. It also detailed how the browser tool interacts with the web, prioritizing diverse and trustworthy sources.
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Another discovery showed multiple personalities for ChatGPT, with the main one being "v2," a balanced conversational tone. The incident sparked discussions on "jailbreaking" AI systems to bypass safeguards.
3. "There is no such thing as original idea"
I was recently reading a book called “Steal Like an Artist” by Austin Kleon. I read a line from the book which I thought was interesting,
"There is no such thing called Original Idea"
"if a piece of work appears original, it means the sources of inspiration are not identifiable”
Well, this is arguable, but it's not entirely wrong. The original ideas that we think are sometimes a direct or indirect inspiration of something else. Whether it is writing blogs or making videos or a piece of code. ?We are always inspired from somewhere in the world. We pick some ideas we like and use it with our own style.
There is a fine line between copying and inspiring. In copying, people would know the original source but if you are inspired then the original source is blurry to find.
That's it from my side for this week! If you like this newsletter, then subscribe to Naked AI! it is going to pop in your email every Friday.
Yours truly,