Anthropic, the AI startup with former Open AI staff and $1.3B in investments, including $300M from Google, develops "constitutional AI" to defend chatbots against adversarial inputs. Andrew Tarantola of Engadget explains the AI Constitution and its importance in the AI field.
Discover the AI startup Anthropic and its revolutionary plan to develop a constitution designed to protect AI. Founded by former OpenAI employees and funded by Google with $300 million, Anthropic offers a chatbot named Claude across Slack. Through their “Constitutional AI” method, the company works to ensure their AI won't be used for harm, setting a benchmark for others to follow. Their mission is to make sure AI remains safe and ethical.
The Artificial Intelligence (AI) market is growing rapidly with many tech companies competing to build the strongest chatbot. Microsoft OpenAI and Google Bard are at the forefront of this race, but they are not alone. Slack, Salesforce, Amazon Web Services, Meta AI, Anthropic, and Character.AI are just a few of the rising companies vying to lead the AI domain. Get ready to enter the realm of advanced AI as responsible innovation takes the foreground.
Mark Zuckerberg of Meta was noticeably absent from a White House meeting between leading AI-driven companies. Discussions centered around regulations for the technology and the development of Artificial Intelligence. OpenAI, Alphabet, Anthropic and Microsoft discussed the safety of AI with President Joe Biden. Meta hasn't been invited to join, but have invested heavily in AI research. Get the details on Meta and Mark Zuckerberg's influence in the AI space.
. Don't miss the good news! AI startups are growing and attracting investments at higher valuations than other startups. Carta survey confirms such growth and with the success of OpenAI, Hugging Face, and Anthropic, AI startups are here to stay. Learn more about this and more AI related investments in our survey.
Explore the evolution of tech policy from Obama's optimism to Harris's vision at the Democratic National Convention. What's next for Democrats in tech?