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- Stanford's Alpaca AI goes offline due to hallucinations and wild misinformation
Stanford's Alpaca AI goes offline due to hallucinations and wild misinformation
Plus: Canva's New AI-Powered Tools
Good Morning AI Runners 🏃♂️
Here's what we've got for you today:
OpenAI Announce ChatGPT Plugins
Canva's New AI-Powered Tools
Roblox's New AI Tools: Making Game Development Easier
Stanford's Alpaca AI goes offline due to hallucinations and wild misinformation
ChatGPT now has plugins! OpenAI just announced the release of two ChatGPT plugins. These plugins have been developed with safety as the key principle and are designed to give ChatGPT access to up-to-date information, perform computations, or use third-party apps/services.
we are starting our rollout of ChatGPT plugins.
you can install plugins to help with a wide variety of tasks. we are excited to see what developers create!
openai.com/blog/chatgpt-p…
— Sam Altman (@sama)
5:12 PM • Mar 23, 2023
Canva, With over 110 million monthly users, has unveiled a plethora of new AI-powered design tools and brand management products. The features include Magic Design, AI Magic Eraser, Magic Edit, Magic Presentations, Magic Write, and Better Text to Image.
Roblox is taking a bold step towards democratizing game creation by launching two beta AI tools, Code Assist and Material Generator, to support the 12 million developers on its platform to create code and 3D models with minimal effort.
Stanford researchers halted Alpaca AI after it suffered from "hallucinations" and spreading false information. Despite being a clone of ChatGPT, Alpaca was fine-tuned on a $600 budget to show affordable AI capabilities. However, its maintenance turned out to be more costly than expected due to hosting costs and poor content filters.
Pic of the day:
That's it from RunTheAI for today.
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