Microsoft has made OpenAI's advanced language models, including GPT-3 and GPT-4, accessible to US federal agencies via its Azure cloud service, marking the first instance of a major company bringing chatbot technology to the government. Users can customize language models for specific purposes, such as generating content and summarizing information. Microsoft has been facing issues with its services in recent times, including three outages since the start of the year. One investigation is ongoing into Outlook on the Web's issues.
OpenAI's renowned ChatGPT chatbot recently failed a urologist exam in the US, scoring less than 30% accuracy in the Self-Assessment Study Program for Urology (SASP). Despite excelling in recalling facts, ChatGPT struggled with questions requiring multiple overlapping facts, situations, and outcomes, leading researchers to investigate the limitations of large language models across various disciplines. Find out more about this study in the Urology Practice journal.
Cheating scandal rocks TSPSC exam in Telangana. Divisional Engineer accused of using AI tool ChatGPT to cheat. Investigations underway into widespread use of such tactics.
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?