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darioamodei.com
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| | | | | [AI summary] The text discusses the implications of China's advancements in AI, particularly through the development of DeepSeek models, and the role of export controls on AI chips. It highlights the ongoing trend of companies investing heavily in training powerful AI models, which is becoming increasingly expensive despite cost reductions due to efficiency gains. The author argues that export controls are crucial to prevent China from acquiring the necessary chips to develop advanced AI systems, which could lead to a bipolar world with significant global implications. The text also addresses the performance of DeepSeek, noting that their achievements are not due to the lack of export controls but rather their resources and talent. The author emphasizes the ... | |
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www.vice.com
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| | | | | OpenAI is today unrecognizable, with multi-billion-dollar deals and corporate partnerships. Will it seek to own its shiny AI future? | |
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www.windowscentral.com
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| | | | | OpenAI, Google, and Anthropic have encountered critical issues, including a lack of high-quality training data and sufficient resources to develop advanced AI models. | |
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www.livescience.com
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| | | A recent update caused ChatGPT to turn into a sycophant, with the chatbot excessively complimenting and flattering its users with reassurances - even when they said they'd harmed animals or stopped taking their medication. OpenAI has now reversed the changes. | ||