OpenAI launches Atlas browser
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OpenAI cracks down on Sora 2 deepfakes
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OpenAI has launched a web browser as it seeks to compete with Big Tech groups such as Google and its biggest investor Microsoft to control the tools people use to access the internet.
CNBC's MacKenzie Sigalos reports on news regarding OpenAI. Man gropes, attacks store's customers, then female shopper fatally shoots him, authorities say
Andrej Karpathy, one of the most influential figures in modern artificial intelligence and a founding member of OpenAI, sent shockwaves through the tech world over the weekend with a sobering assessment of the industry’s progress toward artificial general intelligence (AGI).
OpenAI is paying some 100 ex-investment bankers from financial giants like JP Morgan & Chase, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs to train its AI models— part of a secret internal project code named Mercury,
OpenAI needs a web browser if it's going to be truly useful. So Sam Altman will have a big job on his hands to convince people to use his new one.
OpenAI has formed a new team of over 100 former investment bankers under a new initiative internally called “Project Mercury.” The project pays contractors, many of whom are former employees of JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley, $150 per hour to create financial models to train AI.