OpenAI advised Microsoft to take its time integrating its AI into Bing: Report

 Microsoft and OpenAI reportedly spat over generative AI, with Sam Altman-run ChatGPT developer warning Satya Nadella-run tech giant to take its time incorporating GPT-4 into its Bing search engine. However, according to The Wall Street Journal, Microsoft went forward with adding GPT-4 technology into Bing "despite warnings that it may take time to minimise the inaccurate and strange responses." According to the study, OpenAI cautioned against releasing a chatbot based on an unpublished version of GPT-4 too soon. "The rollouts of ChatGPT last autumn and Microsoft's AI-infused Bing months later also created tension," according to a study published late Tuesday.




Microsoft staff were concerned that "ChatGPT would steal the thunder from the new Bing." Some others also suggested that Bing may benefit from the lessons acquired from how the general public used ChatGPT.

Users reported inaccurate replies and worries about encounters with the programme after theABing Chat was launched earlier this year. Microsoft instantly restricted Bing Chat responses to prevent the AI from becoming bizarre. According to the study, some Microsoft researchers "complain about the limited access to OpenAI's technology."

According to the study, "while a select few teams within Microsoft have access to the model's inner workings such as its code base and model weights, the majority of the company's teams do not." OpenAI models and technology are licenced by Microsoft for usage in Bing, Azure, Office, Windows, and other products.

The AI-powered Bing chatbot from Microsoft has already been released.




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