OpenAI Launches Atlas Browser
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An amended complaint from the parents of Adam Raine, a 16-year-old who died by suicide, alleges the changes were part of a push to increase engagement.
Family of teen who took his own life after ChatGPT use alleges chatbot maker intentionally weakened protections
OpenAI's new browser is a surface for the company to distribute ChatGPT and develop new AI features rather than improving core web experience.
OpenAI will offer Britain's government and businesses an opportunity to store data in the UK from Friday, helping unlock the potential of AI for more companies and public services, Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy will announce on Thursday.
The planned $15 billion campus in Port Washington, Wisc., is part of OpenAI and Oracle’s previously-announced plan to deliver up to 4.5 gigawatts of additional Stargate capacity.
The new information comes as the Raines family updated its lawsuit against OpenAI. The family first filed a wrongful death suit against OpenAI in August after alleging their son had taken his own life following conversations with the chatbot about his mental health and suicidal ideation.
Yesterday, OpenAI launched its ChatGPT Atlas browser—a supposedly reimagined web browser that actually looks a lot more like a forked version of Chromium with a chatbot bolted on—in an effort to redefine the way that people navigate the internet.
OpenAI is paying some 100 ex-investment bankers from financial giants like JP Morgan & Chase, Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs to train its AI models— part of a secret internal project code named Mercury,