OpenAI Chief Executive Sam Altman has hosted hundreds of Fortune 500 company executives in San Francisco, New York and London this month where he and other OpenAI executives pitched AI services for corporate use, going head to head in some cases with financial backer Microsoft, attendees told Reuters. Altman directly addressed more than 100 executives in each city at the events, according to attendees who spoke on the condition of anonymity. At each event, Altman and chief operating officer Brad
(Bloomberg) OpenAI is seeing surging demand for the corporate version of ChatGPT even as it confronts a growing number of artificial intelligence companies offering similar products for the workplace. Most Read from BloombergTexas Toll Road Takeover to Cost Taxpayers at Least $1.7 BillionS&P 500 Falls 1% as Oil Jump Spurs Flight to Bonds: Markets WrapApple Explores Home Robotics as Potential ‘Next Big Thing’ After Car FizzlesKim Jong Un Faces Annihilation in Most Korea War ScenariosBiden Tell
The university said on Thursday it will get access to ChatGPT Enterprise, a version of the viral chatbot that offers more security, privacy and higher-speed access to OpenAI's technology. The development contrasts the initial alarm in academic circles, when OpenAI's launch of ChatGPT triggered fears that the technology's sophisticated, human-like responses could be misused. "ASU recognizes that augmented and artificial intelligence systems are here to stay, and we are optimistic about their ability to become incredible tools that help students to learn," ASU President Michael Crow said.