OpenAI's challenges in 2024 will shape the future of AI, setting precedence for AI regulation, AI governance and usage of data to train AI models.
OpenAI ‘considered’ building a humanoid robot
Spill the Beans Suchir Balaji, the young OpenAI whistleblower whose death was made public earlier this month, was apparently being considered as a witness against his former employer in a major lawsuit,
“The introduction of the o3 models highlights the untapped possibilities of AI reasoning capabilities,” writes Amanda Caswell at Tom’s Guide. “From enhancing software development workflows to solving complex scientific problems, o3 has the potential to reshape industries and redefine human-AI collaboration.”
OpenAI had a challenging journey in marking itself as a prominent force in Artificial Intelligence. However, major milestones and other setbacks occurred for
See all the announcements from OpenAI’s 12-day extravaganza, including new integrations for developers and an opportunity to stress-test the next big model.
OpenAI's biggest moments in 2024 included lawsuits, Sam Altman's comeback, a historic funding round, and a legal fight with Elon Musk.
Suchir Balaji, a former researcher at OpenAI who openly questioned the legality of its data-gathering practices, died by suicide, authorities said.
OpenAI’s board of directors has promised investors that it will restructure the organization within the next two years.
Microsoft is reportedly looking to move away from using OpenAI models to power its 365 Copilot in a bid to cut costs.
OpenAI announced a new family of AI reasoning models on Friday, o3, which the startup claims to be more advanced than o1 or anything else it has released.
Microsoft and OpenAI have had something of a symbiotic relationship, with the former giving billions of capital to a startup AI lab and in return gaining early access to cutting-edge models that are now baked into Microsoft’s suite of productivity software.