Parmy: We're in a really interesting moment for how we use these models. Morgan Stanley has been using GPT-4 since last year and they said that about 200 of their wealth management staff had been using a chatbot. Parmy: There's a lot of talk about these systems replacing professional jobs. But I think they're just going to make professional workers have to do more in less time.
As the technology powering artificial intelligence keeps improving, it’s getting harder to tell the difference between human and machine. And that means companies are looking to capitalize on its uses.
ChatGPT’s maker OpenAI is quickly rolling out new iterations, like the more powerful version of the product called GPT-4. Google has introduced its own version, albeit with some early stumbles. And Elon Musk also has his eye on the AI space.
Bloomberg Opinion columnist Parmy Olson and technology reporters Dina Bass and Rachel Metz have reported extensively on the rise of ChatGPT and other forms of AI. They join this episode to talk through the upsides–and significant downsides–of a bot that can appear to write and sort of think for you, and what it looks like when humanlike machines become a bigger part of our daily work and lives.
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