Generative AI's wild 2023
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[January 03, 2024]
By Kenneth Li
(Reuters) - ChatGPT was well on its way to becoming a household name
even before 2023 kicked off.
Just weeks after the Nov. 30 launch of the generative artificial
intelligence-powered chatbot, OpenAI, the non-profit behind ChatGPT, was
projected to rake in as much as $1 billion in revenue in 2024, sources
told Reuters at the time.
The so-called large language model's ability to turn prompts into
poetry, song, and high school essays enchanted 100 million users within
two months, accomplishing what took Facebook four and a half years and
Twitter five in becoming the fastest growing consumer app ever.
Sometimes, the answers were wrong, despite being delivered with
conviction. This happened often enough that “hallucinate,” in the sense
of AI producing wrong information, was selected as Dictionary.com’s word
of the year, owing to the technology’s deep impressions on society.
Such mistakes did not sap the euphoria or stop the existential dread
this new technology inspired. Investors, led by Microsoft's multibillion
dollar bet on OpenAI, injected $27 billion into generative AI startups
in 2023, according to Pitchbook. The battle for AI supremacy, stewing in
the background between big tech firms for years, was suddenly in focus
with Alphabet, Meta and Amazon.com all announcing new milestones.
By March, thousands of scientists and AI experts, including Elon Musk,
signed an open letter demanding a pause to training more powerful
systems to study their impact on, and potential danger to, humanity. The
move drew parallels to “Oppenheimer,” Christopher Nolan’s box office hit
about the titular atomic bomb maker’s warnings that the relentless
pursuit of progress could lead to human extinction.
“This is an existential risk," said one of the "godfathers of AI,"
Geoffrey Hinton, who quit Alphabet in May. "It’s close enough that we
ought to be working very hard right now, and putting a lot of resources
into figuring out what we can do about it.”
WHY IT MATTERS
Consultancy PwC estimated AI-related economic impact could reach $15.7
trillion globally by 2030, nearly the gross domestic output of China.
Powering this growth optimism is the fact that nearly every industry
from finance and legal to manufacturing and entertainment have embraced
AI as part of its foreseeable strategy.
The winners and losers in the AI era are only just emerging. As in other
eras, beneficiaries will likely be drawn along socio-economic lines.
Civil rights advocates have raised concerns over potential bias in AI in
fields such as recruitment, while labor unions have warned of deep
disruptions to employment as AI threatens to reduce or eliminate some
jobs including writing computer code and drafting entertainment content.
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Words reading "Artificial intelligence AI", miniature of robot and
toy hand are pictured in this illustration taken December 14, 2023.
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
Chipmaker Nvidia, whose graphics processors are the hottest
commodity in the global AI race, has emerged as a big early winner,
with its market capitalization soaring into the trillion dollar club
alongside Apple and Alphabet.
In the final months of the year, another winner appeared
unexpectedly out of turmoil. In November, the board of OpenAI fired
CEO Sam Altman for “not being consistently candid with them,”
according to its terse statement.
In the absence of explanation, the spectacle became a referendum
over AI evangelism, represented on the one hand by Altman’s push to
commercialize AI, versus skeptics and doomsayers who sought a slower
and more careful approach.
The optimists - and Altman - won. The ousted CEO was restored just
days later, thanks in no small part to OpenAI employees who
threatened a mass exodus without him at the helm.
In explaining what brought the company to the brink, Altman said
people were fretting over the high stakes of developing AI that
could surpass human intelligence. "I think that all exploded,” he
said at a New York event in December.
Some OpenAI researchers had warned of a new AI breakthrough ahead of
Altman's ouster, through a top-secret model called Q* (pronounced
Q-Star), Reuters reported in November.
WHAT DOES IT MEAN FOR 2024?
One question provoked by the OpenAI saga: will the future of AI and
its societal impact continue to be deliberated behind closed doors,
by a privileged few in Silicon Valley?
Regulators led by the EU are determined to play a lead role in 2024
with a comprehensive plan to establish guardrails for the technology
in the form of the EU AI Act. The details of the draft are due to be
disclosed in the coming weeks.
These rules, and others being drafted in the U.K. and U.S., come as
the world heads into the biggest election year in history, raising
concern about AI-generated misinformation targeting voters. In 2023
alone, NewsGuard, a company which established a ratings system for
news and information websites, tracked 614 “unreliable” AI-generated
sites in 15 languages from English to Arabic and Chinese.
Good or bad, expect AI, which has already been conscripted to make
campaign calls in the U.S., to play an outsize role in many of the
elections taking place this year.
(Reporting by Kenneth Li in New York; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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