Silicon Valley generative AI companies are getting over their aversion to working with the U.S. Department of Defense, as the pressure builds to get returns on massive AI investments.
OpenAI's yet-to-be-released flagship AI video generator Sora was leaked on HuggingFace yesterday. A group of disgruntled artists given early access decided to share it with the world in protest of being used as "PR puppets."
OpenAI is funding academic research into algorithms that can predict humans’ moral judgements.
The former Google Deepmind scientist told the Business Post the lab will ensure there is a culture of accountability around the creation of AI systems
The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) is looking to procure generative AI models for its Universal Transparent ... Meta's LLaMa 3.5, OpenAI's GPT-4o and Google's Gemini Pro. The model will be integrated with the myScheme platform ...
On Tuesday, a group of 16 artists leaked OpenAI's unreleased Sora text-to-video generator to the public. In an open letter addressed to "Corporate AI Overlords" and posted on the AI hosting platform Hugging Face,
A new so-called “reasoning” AI model, QwQ-32B-Preview, has arrived on the scene. It’s one of the few to rival OpenAI’s o1, and it’s the first available to download under a permissive license.
At the heart of the controversy is a multifaceted conflict involving technological advancement, ethical concerns and artistic advocacy.
OpenAI has filed a trademark application for its latest AI model, o1, as the firm moves to shield its intellectual property.
Quickly, AI experts on social media noticed the posting and confirmed that the page connected to endpoints on OpenAI's actual Sora API and hosting on a videos.openai.com domain, presumably with authentication tokens provided to testers by OpenAI itself.