OpenAI announces latest model GPT-4o amid copyright infringement lawsuits
OpenAI on Monday released a higher performing and more efficient version of the artificial intelligence technology that underpins its popular generative tool ChatGPT, making it free to all users.
“Text and image input rolling out today in API and ChatGPT with voice and video in the coming weeks,” OpenAI said on X/Twitter on Monday, May 13.(OpenAI)
The update to OpenAI’s flagship product landed a day before Google is expected to make its own announcements about Gemini, the search engine giant’s own AI tool competing with ChatGPT head on.
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“We’re very, very excited to bring GPT-4o to all of our free users out there,” Chief Technology Officer Mira Murati said at the highly anticipated launch event in San Francisco.
The new model will be rolled out in OpenAI’s products over the next weeks, the company said.
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OpenAI’s GPT4-o announcement
Murati and engineers from OpenAI demonstrated the new powers of GPT-4o at the virtual event, asking questions and posing challenges to the beefed-up version of the ChatGPT chatbot.
“We know that these models get more and more complex, but we want the experience of interaction to actually become more natural, easy,” Murati said before the demo.
This included asking questions to a human-sounding ChatGPT in Italian and asking the bot to interpret facial expressions or make complex math equations.
The event is just the latest episode in the AI arms race that has seen OpenAI-backer Microsoft propelled past Apple as the world’s biggest company by market capitalization.
OpenAI and Microsoft are in a heated rivalry with Google to be generative AI’s major player, but Facebook-owner Meta and upstart Anthropic are also making big moves to compete.
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All the companies are scrambling to come up with ways to cover generative AI’s exorbitant costs, much of which goes to chip giant Nvidia and its powerful GPU semiconductors.
For now less performing versions of OpenIA or Google’s chatbots are available to customers for free, with questions still lingering over whether the public at large is ready to pay a subscription to maintain access to the technology.
The AI makers are also feeling the pressure from creators, who are demanding payment for the content used to train their models, which will likely also end up in making the technology more expensive.
OpenAI has signed content partnerships with the Associated Press, the Financial Times and Axel Springer, but is also caught in a major lawsuit with the New York Times. It also faces separate lawsuits from artists, musicians and authors in US courtrooms.
OpenAI has also teased audiences with excerpts of realistic-looking clips created from its Sora video generator, which is currently under test.