- England captain George wary of Jones's influence on Japan
- Thousands demand lower rents at Barcelona demo
- 'Puzzle' master Sinner powers champions Italy back into Davis Cup final
- Odegaard inspires Arsenal to reignite title hopes
- Marseille down Lens to stay in touch with Ligue 1 leaders
- Novak Djokovic: All-conquering, divisive tennis superstar
- Scott Bessent a credible, safe pick for Treasury: experts
- World approves UN rules for carbon trading between nations at COP29
- Putin signs law letting Ukraine fighters write off bad debts
- Thousands march against Angola govt
- Ireland coast to victory as they run Fiji ragged
- Atletico make comeback to beat Alaves as Simeone hits milestone
- Aid only 'delaying deaths' as Sudan counts down to famine: agency chief
- Leipzig lose more ground on Bayern with Hoffenheim loss
- Arsenal back to winning ways, Chelsea up to third in Premier League
- Sinner powers Davis Cup holders Italy past Australia to final
- Andy Murray to coach Novak Djokovic
- Leipzig lose ground on Bayern, Dortmund and Leverkusen win
- Fear in central Beirut district hit by Israeli strikes
- Chinese film about Covid-19 wins Taiwan's top Golden Horse prizes
- Tuipulotu puts anger behind him as he captains Scotland against native Australia
- Inter smash Verona to take Serie A lead
- Mass rape trial sparks demonstrations across France
- Lebanon says 15 killed in Israeli strike on central Beirut
- Eddie Jones will revel in winding up England - Genge
- Chelsea see off Leicester on Maresca's King Power return
- Storms bring chaos to Ireland, France, UK
- Berrettini gives Italy edge on Australia in Davis Cup semis
- Amber Glenn storms to gold in Cup of China
- High-flying Chelsea see off Leicester
- Climate-threatened nations stage protest at COP29 over contentious deal
- Families fleeing after 32 killed in new sectarian violence in Pakistan
- Ancelotti says 'ugly' to speculate about Mbappe mental health
- Failure haunts UN environment conferences
- Colapinto in doubt for Las Vegas GP after crashing
- Lebanon says 11 killed in Israeli strike on central Beirut
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- Jaiswal slams unbeaten 90 as India seize control against Australia
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- Patrick Reed shoots rare 59 to make Hong Kong Open history
- Record-breaker Kane hits back after England criticism
- Cameron Smith jumps into lead at Australian PGA Championship
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ChatGPT bot 'for professional use' on the way
Hot startup OpenAI on Wednesday initiated a waitlist for a professional and paid version of its software ChatGPT, which has sparked debate about artificial intelligence and the future of work.
OpenAI co-founder Greg Brockman teased an upcoming version of ChatGPT "geared for professional use" as media reports swirled that Microsoft plans to invest $10 billion in the startup.
Microsoft, which makes its own Cortana digital assistant, declined to comment.
"Working on a professional version of ChatGPT; will offer higher limits and faster performance," Brockman said in a tweet.
OpenAI late last year released its free version of the ChatGPT chatbot that is capable of answering questions so well that it reopened the debate on risks linked to artificial intelligence (AI) technologies.
ChatGPT has also prompted concerns it could be used by students for homework assignments or to replace authors or others with writing jobs.
The professional model will come with a fee and be faster than the free version, which will remain available, the company said.
A waiting list page asked people what prices they think would be too high, too low, and just right for ChatGPT and how upset they would be if they could no longer use the chatbot.
"If you are selected, we'll reach out to you to set up a payment process and a pilot," the page explained.
"Please keep in mind that this is an early experimental program that is subject to change."
Claude de Loupy, head of Syllabs, a French company specialized in automatic text generation, said "ChatGPT's response can be off the mark," but that its overall performance remains "really impressive."
Conversations with the chatbot, posted online by fascinated users, show a kind of omniscient machine that is capable of explaining scientific concepts or writing scenes for a play or even lines of computer code.
Its level of sophistication both fascinates and worries some observers, who voice concern these technologies could be misused to trick people, by spreading false information or by creating increasingly credible scams.
Asked about these dangers, a response from ChatGPT said that human-like chatbots could be hazardous if misused.
"There are potential dangers in building highly sophisticated chatbots, particularly if they are designed to be indistinguishable from humans in their language and behavior," the chatbot told AFP.
On its welcome page, OpenAI lays out disclaimers, saying the chatbot "may occasionally generate incorrect information" or "produce harmful instructions or biased content."
OpenAI, cofounded in 2015 in San Francisco by billionaire tech mogul Elon Musk, who left the business in 2018, received $1 billion from Microsoft in 2019.
F.Müller--BTB