OpenAI, ChatGPT
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Microsoft, OpenAI reach new deal
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ChatGPT users will soon have a new way to buy products using the generative artificial intelligence bot, thanks to a partnership between PayPal and OpenAI. PayPal, which owns the payment platform Venmo,
OpenAI says it has improved ChatGPT’s ability to recognize and respond to users expressing thoughts of suicide or self-harm.
A New York judge ruled on Monday that OpenAI cannot stop a consolidated, multi-district class action brought against it by dozens of authors for direct copyright infringement by the outputs of its large language model (LLM),
PayPal said on Tuesday it entered into a deal with OpenAI that will allow ChatGPT users to buy products using the payment firm's platform, sending its shares up 10%.
OpenAI said it's working with mental health professionals to improve ChatGPT's responses. The AI chatbot has 800 million weekly active users.
PayPal becomes first payment platform integrated into ChatGPT, enabling instant checkout for millions of users through new AI-powered commerce partnership.
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OpenAI’s ChatGPT Atlas Browser Found Vulnerable to Prompt Injections
OpenAI's new ChatGPT Atlas web browser has a security flaw that lets attackers execute prompt injection attacks by disguising malicious instructions as URLs. The AI security firm NeuralTrust says the issue stems from how the browser's omnibox interprets entries as URLs or natural-language commands.
The ruling greenlights lawsuits against OpenAI and Microsoft by authors Martin, Michael Chabon, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Sarah Silverman, and others.