Investors wondering whether to buy into AI stocks after their impressive 2023 run. Microsoft, Palantir & Nvidia offer long-term potential, but considerations must be made on fundamentals, diversification & valuation.
Microsoft launched Azure OpenAI, an AI service for government agencies. This service provides secure and reliable access to GPT-3 and 4, along with embeddings. Despite past security missteps, Microsoft promises government data will remain safe via REST APIs, a Python SDK, or Azure AI Studio. Azure traffic is encrypted with MACsec, with all communication kept within Microsoft's global backbone, providing a safer AI service to government customers.
Microsoft's new Azure OpenAI Service lets US government agencies access large language models for content generation, summarization, and semantic search. With pre-trained GPT models, agencies can deploy AI-enabled apps quickly and securely. Plus, queries are encrypted, and data remains within the government environment. Apply to modify content management features to prevent data logging in Azure commercial.
Microsoft is enhancing its Azure Government cloud service by integrating OpenAI's advanced language models. GPT-4 and GPT-3 will benefit from this feature to facilitate tasks such as summarizing field reports and generating codes. They will have their segregated commercial cloud to operate in, distinct from Azure's. The models will be available to government clients, including the Department of Defense, Energy Department, and NASA, who use Azure Government. Get to know how the integration operates.
Microsoft's Azure Government clients like NASA and the Defense Department can now access OpenAI's GPT-4 and GPT-3 models. Microsoft is set to host the models in its cloud computing space separated from Azure Government's cloud, ensuring no usage of customers' data to train AI models. The models will help generate output for research questions, computer code, and field reports.
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?