ChatGPT, is this the "Jurassic Park" moment for AI? Upcoming ChatGPT4 is a T-Rex...Italy becomes the first western nation to ban ChatGPT

This is crazy. Does this enhance of dissolve critical thinking? :idea:
I think it reinforced my thinking by learning exactly what you want.
Also adding to the prompt to show you how it came up with that answer.
Next by using it as a contrarian on any given topic it allows you to not be basic when asking thought provoking questions to leaders, professional etc.

Don't be basic when using this tool.

Write local legislation or strategizes to help people get out of poverty. I'm sure there's a lot of ideas that can be broken down by using your own mind first.

Excuse me if I'm all over the place.
 
This is crazy. Does this enhance of dissolve critical thinking? :idea:

Great question, but these tools are becoming our standard. In my office we’re doing some ridiculous shit with AI. We’re able to gauge how businesses are doing by having it analyze our consulting notes. We have over 50,000 notes from over 5000 businesses.

I asked the AI how are Black businesses doing, and it scanned all of our notes of Black owned businesses and it accurately relayed the challenges Black businesses face. I wish I asked for a solution, I’ll probably do that and will post it here.
 
I think it reinforced my thinking by learning exactly what you want.
Also adding to the prompt to show you how it came up with that answer.
Next by using it as a contrarian on any given topic it allows you to not be basic when asking thought provoking questions to leaders, professional etc.

Don't be basic when using this tool.

Write local legislation or strategizes to help people get out of poverty. I'm sure there's a lot of ideas that can be broken down by using your own mind first.

Excuse me if I'm all over the place.
Great question, but these tools are becoming our standard. In my office we’re doing some ridiculous shit with AI. We’re able to gauge how businesses are doing by having it analyze our consulting notes. We have over 50,000 notes from over 5000 businesses.

I asked the AI how are Black businesses doing, and it scanned all of our notes of Black owned businesses and it accurately relayed the challenges Black businesses face. I wish I asked for a solution, I’ll probably do that and will post it here.

It will be interesting to see this evolve and how it affects the education system. Students already admitting to using on assignments :dunno:

I disagree with that aspect of it, but it is what it is. It’s difficult to fight against technology.

Critical thinking in math is already dissolving because of the apps and calculators that’s doing the work for them. And they’re so used to the calculators doing the work for them that they don’t even know what was considering cheating when I was in school.

I’m trying to figure out how to get ahead of the curve and how to leverage this new wave, especially in education.
 
Bosses Are Catching Job Applicants Using ChatGPT for a Boost

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It was an unexpected problem. Earlier this year, Christina Qi, the chief executive of market data company Databento, noticed almost every job application included exactly what she was looking for.

The company prompts candidates to write a tweet and a press release about microwave towers, a niche topic that requires research, Ms. Qi said. Normally, most candidates fail the test. This time all five passed.

The tests—four from internship applicants and one from someone seeking a full-time content strategist role—were all so similar, “as if it was written by one person,” she said. Suspicious, Ms. Qi put the prompt into ChatGPT, the artificial-intelligence chatbot from OpenAI, to see what it could produce.

“Lo and behold, I got pretty much the same answer that all five candidates had submitted to me,” she said.

Since its launch in November, ChatGPT has been a hot topic at dinner tables and water coolers. Microsoft, Google, Snap and other companies have incorporated artificial intelligence into their products. People have experimented with using ChatGPT at work. Some have even started using it when looking for new roles, tapping the chat assistant to help write cover letters, tweak résumés and formulate responses to anticipated interview questions—without necessarily telling the people doing the hiring.

Employers, who have long used AI to screen potential employees, aren’t always disqualifying applicants who use ChatGPT, but they are scrambling to figure out how to assess candidates who may be using the tool to give them an edge.

Attention-grabbing applications
After being let go by his previous employer in January, Kyle Mickey started job hunting for roles in software engineering—alongside thousands of laid-off tech workers.

The 38-year-old from Colorado said he turned to ChatGPT for help, first sharing job descriptions and his résumé with the chatbot to see what it would tweak. Then he asked ChatGPT to write a recommendation letter for a role he coveted. The chatbot deemed him perfect for the job, as his technical skill set “aligns well with the requirements.”

Mr. Mickey sent the remarks to a recruiter, saying ChatGPT endorsed his skills.

“The recruiter was immediately like, ‘Let’s chat, I like the creativity,’ ” he said. Mr. Mickey didn’t get that job, but was hired at another company without ChatGPT’s help.

Ryan Stringham, 31, who lives in Utah and works in product management, used it to help write cover letters, including one that got him a foot in the door, and later hired, at a smart-tech company.

“You’re always looking, you’re always applying and you’re getting drained,” Mr. Stringham said of job hunting.

He said the bot broke his writer’s block, distilling his long-winded cover letter into four tight paragraphs. He said it also helped him prepare for job interviews by suggesting new ways for him to ask about company culture and expectations for the role. Instead of asking a vague question about what he should do to excel at the prospective job, ChatGPT suggested Mr. Stringham be more specific about the time frame and metrics for determining success.

Mr. Stringham has encouraged others to use chatbots in the job-hunt process, posting about them on LinkedIn and giving advice to other job seekers.

The only place he hasn’t disclosed his ChatGPT use: at work.

“It helped me get past the application process, and the recruiter never asked about it,” Mr. Stringham said, adding that he edited the cover letter himself and aced the interviews on his own.

‘How we present ourselves’
Programs, websites and other tools to help people fix their résumés and cover letters aren’t new. Microsoft Office and Google Docs offer résumé and letter templates, while companies such as Jobscan promise to optimize résumés to grab the attention of hiring managers, recruiters and hiring-system algorithms.

Candidates need to combine ChatGPT’s edits with their own editing and voice, said Sarah Baker Andrus, chief executive of Avarah Careers, a career coaching firm in Delaware. Whatever a candidate submits for a job should accurately reflect their skills, she said.

“We’re responsible for how we present ourselves,” Ms. Andrus said. “If you decide to use ChatGPT, it’s worthwhile to ask, ‘Is that representing the me that I want to present?’ ”

Employers are already finding ways to catch applicants who cheat with AI.

Engineers applying to San Francisco-based Cobalt Robotics take part in a remote one-hour coding interview where they are paired with an employee to test collaboration and problem-solving skills. If candidates need more than an hour, they can finish on their own, but a screening program called CoderPad tracks their work.

Last month, one candidate went from showing no work in CoderPad to suddenly having a complete solution, said Erik Schluntz, Cobalt Robotics’s chief technology officer and co-founder. He suspected the applicant had sought AI assistance and then copied and pasted its response.

The company declined to move forward with the candidate without telling the person why, though Mr. Schluntz tweeted about it.



Mr. Schluntz said Cobalt can’t properly evaluate candidates who use AI helpers today, but said he can envision giving applicants more challenging tasks in the future if they want to use tools like ChatGPT as an assistant.

“Giving a problem to someone that ChatGPT can solve doesn’t assess someone—it just assesses ChatGPT,” Mr. Schluntz said.

About a week after first spotting the AI-boosted applications, Ms. Qi started letting potential Databento hires use ChatGPT. The new prompt requires candidates to perform additional research and make edits to supplement what the AI tool spits out, and Databento gives “extra points” to people who complete the test bot-free.

Though Ms. Qi said she can usually spot when something was written by ChatGPT, the company also enlists the aid of a bot detector.

“It’s better to be ahead of the game and accept that people are using this rather than try to deny it,” Ms. Qi said.



 
It can pass the uniform bar exam in the 90th percentile
It can analyze photos... take a pic of what's in your cupboard or fridge, it can serve up options for a recipe




GPT-4 Makes Old ChatGPT Look Like a JOKE!

 
David Guetta recreates Eminem's iconic voice using AI
David Guetta has revealed that he used online AI tools to mimic Eminem’s iconic voice. During a DJ set, Guetta pretended to speak like Eminem, to the bewilderment of the stadium crowd. Guetta revealed in a lter social media post that he used online tools, including ChatGPT to recreate the rapper’s voice and his typical prose.

 
David Guetta recreates Eminem's iconic voice using AI
David Guetta has revealed that he used online AI tools to mimic Eminem’s iconic voice. During a DJ set, Guetta pretended to speak like Eminem, to the bewilderment of the stadium crowd. Guetta revealed in a lter social media post that he used online tools, including ChatGPT to recreate the rapper’s voice and his typical prose.


Assholes with money
 
Italy became the first Western country to ban ChatGPT. Here’s what other countries are doing

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This photo illustration shows the ChatGPT logo at an office in Washington, DC, on March 15, 2023.

KEY POINTS

  • Italy last week became the first Western country to ban ChatGPT, the popular AI chatbot.
  • ChatGPT has both impressed researchers with its capabilities while also worrying regulators and ethicists about the negative implications for society.
  • The move has highlighted an absence of any concrete regulations, with the European Union and China among the few jurisdictions developing tailored rules for AI.
  • Various governments are exploring how to regulate AI, and some are thinking of how to deal with general purpose systems such as ChatGPT.
Italy has become the first country in the West to ban ChatGPT, the popular artificial intelligence chatbot from U.S. startup OpenAI.

Last week, the Italian Data Protection Watchdog ordered OpenAI to temporarily cease processing Italian users’ data amid a probe into a suspected breach of Europe’s strict privacy regulations.

The regulator, which is also known as Garante, cited a data breach at OpenAI which allowed users to view the titles of conversations other users were having with the chatbot.

There “appears to be no legal basis underpinning the massive collection and processing of personal data in order to ‘train’ the algorithms on which the platform relies,” Garante said in a statement Friday.

Garante also flagged worries over a lack of age restrictions on ChatGPT, and how the chatbot can serve factually incorrect information in its responses.

OpenAI, which is backed by Microsoft, risks facing a fine of 20 million euros ($21.8 million), or 4% of its global annual revenue, if it doesn’t come up with remedies to the situation in 20 days.

Italy isn’t the only country reckoning with the rapid pace of AI progression and its implications for society. Other governments are coming up with their own rules for AI, which, whether or not they mention generative AI, will undoubtedly touch on it. Generative AI refers to a set of AI technologies that generate new content based on prompts from users. It is more advanced than previous iterations of AI, thanks in no small part to new large language models, which are trained on vast quantities of data.




There have long been calls for AI to face regulation. But the pace at which the technology has progressed is such that it is proving difficult for governments to keep up. Computers can now create realistic art, write entire essays, or even generate lines of code, in a matter of seconds.

“We have got to be very careful that we don’t create a world where humans are somehow subservient to a greater machine future,” Sophie Hackford, a futurist and global technology innovation advisor for American farming equipment maker John Deere, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box Europe” Monday.

“Technology is here to serve us. it’s there to make our cancer diagnosis quicker or make humans not have to do jobs that we don’t want to do.”

“We need to be thinking about it very carefully now, and we need to be acting on that now, from a regulation perspective,” she added.

Various regulators are concerned by the challenges AI poses for job security, data privacy, and equality. There are also worries about advanced AI manipulating political discourse through generation of false information.
Many governments are also starting to think about how to deal with general purpose systems such as ChatGPT, with some even considering joining Italy in banning the technology.
Britain
Last week, the U.K. announced plans for regulating AI. Rather than establish new regulations, the government asked regulators in different sectors to apply existing regulations to AI.
The U.K. proposals, which don’t mention ChatGPT by name, outline some key principles for companies to follow when using AI in their products, including safety, transparency, fairness, accountability, and contestability.
Britain is not at this stage proposing restrictions on ChatGPT, or any kind of AI for that matter. Instead, it wants to ensure companies are developing and using AI tools responsibly and giving users enough information about how and why certain decisions are taken.
In a speech to Parliament last Wednesday, Digital Minister Michelle Donelan said the sudden popularity of generative AI showed that risks and opportunities surrounding the technology are “emerging at an extraordinary pace.”
By taking a non-statutory approach, the government will be able to “respond quickly to advances in AI and to intervene further if necessary,” she added.
Dan Holmes, a fraud prevention leader at Feedzai, which uses AI to combat financial crime, said the main priority of the U.K.’s approach was addressing “what good AI usage looks like.”
“It’s more, if you’re using AI, these are the principles you should be thinking about,” Holmes told CNBC. “And it often boils down to two things, which is transparency and fairness.”
The EU
The rest of Europe is expected to take a far more restrictive stance on AI than its British counterparts, which have been increasingly diverging from EU digital laws following the U.K.’s withdrawal from the bloc.
The European Union, which is often at the forefront when it comes to tech regulation, has proposed a groundbreaking piece of legislation on AI.
Known as the European AI Act, the rules will heavily restrict the use of AI in critical infrastructure, education, law enforcement, and the judicial system.

It will work in conjunction with the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation. These rules regulate how companies can process and store personal data.
When the AI act was first dreamed up, officials hadn’t accounted for the breakneck progress of AI systems capable of generating impressive art, stories, jokes, poems and songs.
According to Reuters, the EU’s draft rules consider ChatGPT to be a form of general purpose AI used in high-risk applications. High-risk AI systems are defined by the commission as those that could affect people’s fundamental rights or safety.
They would face measures including tough risk assessments and a requirement to stamp out discrimination arising from the datasets feeding algorithms.
“The EU has a great, deep pocket of expertise in AI. They’ve got access to some of the top notch talent in the world, and it’s not a new conversation for them,” Max Heinemeyer, chief product officer of Darktrace, told CNBC.
“It’s worthwhile trusting them to have the best of the member states at heart and fully aware of the potential competitive advantages that these technologies could bring versus the risks.”
But while Brussels hashes out laws for AI, some EU countries are already looking at Italy’s actions on ChatGPT and debating whether to follow suit.
“In principle, a similar procedure is also possible in Germany,” Ulrich Kelber, Germany’s Federal Commissioner for Data Protection, told the Handelsblatt newspaper.
The French and Irish privacy regulators have contacted their counterparts in Italy to learn more about its findings, Reuters reported. Sweden’s data protection authority ruled out a ban. Italy is able to move ahead with such action as OpenAI doesn’t have a single office in the EU.
Ireland is typically the most active regulator when it comes to data privacy since most U.S. tech giants like Meta and Google have their offices there.
U.S.
The U.S. hasn’t yet proposed any formal rules to bring oversight to AI technology.
The country’s National Institute of Science and Technology put out a national framework that gives companies using, designing or deploying AI systems guidance on managing risks and potential harms.
But it runs on a voluntary basis, meaning firms would face no consequences for not meeting the rules.
So far, there’s been no word of any action being taken to limit ChatGPT in the U.S.

Last month, the Federal Trade Commission received a complaint from a nonprofit research group alleging GPT-4, OpenAI’s latest large language model, is “biased, deceptive, and a risk to privacy and public safety” and violates the agency’s AI guidelines.
The complaint could lead to an investigation into OpenAI and suspension of commercial deployment of its large language models. The FTC declined to comment.
China
ChatGPT isn’t available in China, nor in various countries with heavy internet censorship like North Korea, Iran and Russia. It is not officially blocked, but OpenAI doesn’t allow users in the country to sign up.
Several large tech companies in China are developing alternatives. Baidu, Alibaba and JD.com, some of China’s biggest tech firms, have announced plans for ChatGPT rivals.
China has been keen to ensure its technology giants are developing products in line with its strict regulations.
Last month, Beijing introduced first-of-its-kind regulation on so-called deepfakes, synthetically generated or altered images, videos or text made using AI.
Chinese regulators previously introduced rules governing the way companies operate recommendation algorithms. One of the requirements is that companies must file details of their algorithms with the cyberspace regulator.
Such regulations could in theory apply to any kind of ChatGPT-style of technology.

Italy has banned ChatGPT. Here's what other countries are doing (cnbc.com)
 
Shaddyvillethug converts to Snake Handling
(A Chatgpt generated story)


Once upon a time, in the city of Chicago, there lived a young man named Shaddy. Shaddy was known for his adventurous spirit and his knack for diving headfirst into new experiences. He was always seeking something extraordinary to spice up his life. One day, he stumbled upon a group of people practicing an unconventional form of worship known as snake handling.

Intrigued by their faith and the mystery surrounding this practice, Shaddy decided to attend one of their gatherings. He entered a small, dimly lit chapel on the outskirts of town, where a crowd of fervent believers awaited the arrival of their charismatic leader, Pastor Ezekiel.

As the service commenced, Shaddy watched in awe as Pastor Ezekiel fearlessly handled venomous snakes, dancing and singing in praise to a higher power. The congregation, in a state of fervor, clapped their hands and chanted in unison. Shaddy was captivated by their energy and devotion.

Over the following weeks, Shaddy attended the snake handling services regularly, immersing himself in their rituals and teachings. He learned about the deep-rooted faith that guided their actions, and how they believed that venomous serpents had the power to heal and protect those chosen by the divine.

As Shaddy spent more time with the congregation, he became close to Pastor Ezekiel. The two formed a bond based on their shared love for adventure and the quest for spiritual fulfillment. Pastor Ezekiel saw potential in Shaddy, recognizing his genuine curiosity and open-mindedness.

One fateful day, Pastor Ezekiel approached Shaddy with a proposition. He asked if Shaddy was ready to take the ultimate step, to convert fully to the faith of snake handling. Shaddy hesitated, his mind filled with doubts and uncertainties. But deep within, a burning desire to experience something extraordinary pushed him forward.

With a resolute heart, Shaddy accepted the challenge. He dedicated himself to rigorous training, studying the scriptures and learning the proper techniques for handling venomous snakes. He understood the risks involved but believed that his newfound faith would guide and protect him.

Months passed, and Shaddy's transformation was complete. He stood before the congregation as a devoted snake handler, ready to embrace his destiny. The day of his first solo snake handling ceremony arrived, and the chapel was filled with anticipation.

As Shaddy stepped into the center of the room, the murmurs of the crowd hushed. He picked up a venomous rattlesnake, its scales shimmering under the chapel's warm glow. With unwavering faith, he held the serpent firmly, feeling its power coursing through his veins.

In that moment, Shaddy understood the profound connection between faith and courage. He realized that true bravery lay not in disregarding fear, but in embracing it and finding strength within. The congregation erupted in applause, witnessing Shaddy's fearless act of devotion.

Shaddy's journey from a curious observer to a devoted snake handler brought him not only a unique spiritual experience but also a deep sense of purpose. Through his newfound faith, he discovered the strength to face life's challenges head-on and inspire others to find their own paths to enlightenment.

And so, the story of Shaddy, the adventurous soul who converted to snake handling, became a testament to the transformative power of faith, courage, and the pursuit of the extraordinary.
 
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