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© 2024 AFPOpenAI releases ChatGPT search engine, taking on Google
SAN FRANCISCO©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.
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© 2024 AFP
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sakurasuki
Everything is ok, until the AI engine give hallucinations.
https://cloud.google.com/discover/what-are-ai-hallucinations
Sven Asai
Not exactly everything, because the still not hallucinating outputs also can contain wrong answers or several differing answers, wrong or right, when using the exactly same prompt a few times. The real hallucinations had and still have the many people without mathematical knowledge who think that it soon can work properly in practical applications or surele can work in future when massively scaling up with more chips, more servers, more energy from more nuclear power plants. That is simply impossible and will not happen.
Jay
What's the goal here, to see who can be more woke? Anyone who’s used ChatGPT or Google AI can see the far-left bias a mile away. These platforms constantly push Extreme Progressive talking points, censor conservative views, and sidestep questions about issues like border security, patriotism, reverse racism (read: racism) or traditional values. Far-left developers have clearly coded these AIs to promote ‘woke’ ideas and downplay real concerns about things like inflation, crime, and government overreach. It’s just another way Big Tech tries to silence regular voices.
OpenAI/Google: get your act together or bugger off.
Speed
I used to love the universality of Google's search engine but in the last few years, it's gotten more aggravating to use with many more sponsored ads and somewhat biased results.
If ChatGPT can smooth out and come up with results more quickly and accurately than Google, I'll be glad to go with them.
Forgotten
AI is totally overhyped. With the tech companies over-spending billions with no significant returns they are in fact creating a bubble that might soon burst.
ian
More competition is welcome
TaiwanIsNotChina
Is it going to steal from wikipedia like Google?
Peter Neil
a recent test of the latest and greatest openai model shows that it answers relatively simple questions right 53% of time. so, it’s wrong more than right.
i’ve been critical of the ai bubble, but i’ve come to realize that 53% right is probably an improvement over the average person, going by the internet…
Peter Neil
oh no! it’s wrong 53% of the time, not right.
see, i told you it’s an improvement over humans like me.