Sam Altman and OpenAI just announced a new web browser
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Altman said OpenAI plans to “safely relax the restrictions” on ChatGPT now that engineers have built new safeguards around mental health content.
After receiving backlash, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman said that the company is not rolling back any restrictions related to "mental health."
As some users seek intimacy and companionship from AI, companies are exploring erotic features to keep users engaged and attract new ones.
After OpenAI said it would allow erotic content through ChatGPT, Sam Altman struck a defying tone in defending the decision. The OpenAI CEO said in a post on X that the AI company is “not the elected moral police of the world” in response to criticism from the likes of billionaire Mark Cuban to The National Center on Sexual Exploitation.
The firm has acknowledged how AMD’s move to give up 10% equity “for the privilege of selling to Sam Altman” was unexpected, but the decision seems understandable as AMD has to be “on the OpenAI rocket ship or get left in the dust.
OpenAI's partnerships have pushed the value of its dealmaking to $1 trillion this year alone, and CEO Sam Altman doesn't seem to be finished.
OpenAI says it will soon roll back some of ChatGPT's safeguards, and even allow the chatbot to engage in erotica for adult users.
"This lawsuit was filed with maximum press fanfare and the promise of proving up an egregious series of misrepresentations," wrote OpenAI's counsel at Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz and Morrison & Foerster in the motion.