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- DoNotPay Challenges Lawyers to Step Aside and Let Robot Lawyer Argue in Front of Supreme Court for $1,000,000.
DoNotPay Challenges Lawyers to Step Aside and Let Robot Lawyer Argue in Front of Supreme Court for $1,000,000.
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Here's what we've got for you today:
DoNotPay Challenges Lawyers to Step Aside and Let Robot Lawyer Argue in Front of Supreme Court for $1,000,000.
CES 2023: A Recap of the AI Highlights
DoNotPay Challenges Lawyers to Step Aside and Let Robot Lawyer Argue in Front of Supreme Court for $1,000,000.
Legal services app DoNotPay's CEO Joshua Browder has made a proposal on twitter to any lawyer set to argue a case in front of the U.S. Supreme Court: let DoNotPay's AI lawyer (built on OpenAI's GPT-3 API) take the lead instead, and the human lawyer will get $1 million in return.
All the human lawyer needs to do is wear AirPods and repeat whatever the AI lawyer says in court.
This raises an interesting question: could an artificial intelligence hold its own against a human lawyer in the highest court in the U.S.? DoNotPay thinks so, and is willing to pay to find out.
We'll have to wait and see if any lawyers take DoNotPay up on this offer.
DoNotPay CEO Joshua Browder's original tweet π
We have upcoming cases in municipal (traffic) court next month. But the haters will say βtraffic court is too simple for GPT.β
So we are making this serious offer, contingent on us coming to a formal agreement and all rules being followed.
Please contact me if interested!
β Joshua Browder (@jbrowder1)
4:58 AM β’ Jan 9, 2023
CES 2023: A Recap of the AI Highlights
CES, one of the biggest tech events in the world, just wrapped up for another year. If you missed any of the AI announcements, don't worry β RunTheAI's got you covered.
AMD showed off its new Alveo V70 AI accelerator, designed for data center and cloud deployments and based on its XDNA with AI Engine architecture. The company also gave us a peek at its new integrated data center CPU and GPU, the AMD Instinct MI300, built for HPC and AI performance with Zen 4 CPU cores and HBM memory chips atop CDNA3 GPU architecture.
On top of that, AMD unveiled Ryzen AI Technology β the first dedicated AI hardware in an X86 processor, part of the new Ryzen 7040 Series Mobile processors. These chips are focused on bringing adaptive AI architecture to laptops, providing more performance for real-time AI experiences.
Nvidia had some announcements of its own. The company revealed new features for its metaverse application development platform, Omniverse, including improvements to the 3D modeling tool Blender and a suite of experimental generative AI tools.
Amazon and Panasonic announced that they are teaming up to integrate Alexa into Panasonic's SkipGen in-vehicle infotainment system, allowing customers to use Alexa for car control and navigation simply by saying the wake word.
And that's not all β Amazon is also partnering with home automation company Josh.ai to show off the capabilities of a multi-assistant integration for Josh.ai's home intelligence system. The demo at CES featured Josh.ai's purpose-built assistant controlling the smart home and its connected devices, while users were able to use Alexa for tasks like checking sports scores and managing shopping lists.
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Peter Norvig, is an American computer scientist and fellow at the Stanford Institute for Human-Centered AI. He previously served as a director of research and search quality at Google. Norvig is the co-author with Stuart J. Russell of the most popular textbook in the field of AI: Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach used in more than 1,500 universities in 135 countries.
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