- Neuville wins world title after Tanak crashes at Rally Japan
- Neuville wins world rally title after Tanak crashes in Japan
- Colapinto cleared for Las Vegas GP despite heavy crash
- 'Smiling One' Amorim vows he has ruthless streak Man Utd need
- Marseille down Lens to stay in touch with Ligue 1 leaders, Lyon draw
- New Zealand beat 'proud' Italy in Cane's Test farewell
- Barca collapse in Celta draw without Yamal, Simeone hits milestone
- Thailand's Jeeno equals Yin for lead at LPGA Tour Championship
- New Zealand beat Italy in Cane's Test farewell
- Marseille down Lens to stay in touch with Ligue 1 leaders, Lyon held to draw
- Liga leaders Barca suffer late collapse in Celta draw
- Retegui fires Atalanta top of Serie A ahead of Inter
- Greaves hits maiden Test century as West Indies dominate Bangladesh
- Venezuela opposition calls for mass anti-Maduro protest on Dec. 1
- 'Fragile' Man City in uncharted territory, admits Guardiola
- Erasmus hails Springbok strength in depth after thrashing Wales
- Postecoglou calls for consistent Spurs after Man City rout
- 'We've never lived this situation' admits Guardiola
- Lebanon says more than 55 killed in Israeli strikes
- 'We've never lived this situation' admits Guardiola as Man City lose five in a row
- Under-fire Gatland 'motivated' to continue as Wales coach
- South Africa send Wales crashing to 87-year low in Test rout
- Spurs condemn Man City to fifth straight defeat as Arsenal win
- Defeated Leipzig lose more ground on Bayern, Frankfurt go second
- South Africa put Wales to the sword to wrap up season
- Spurs thrash Man City 4-0 to end 52-match unbeaten home run
- Defeated Leipzig lose more ground on Bayern
- Venezuela opposition calls for 'enormous' anti-Maduro protest
- Inter take Serie A lead as AC Milan and Juve bore in stalemate
- 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
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- 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
Meta unveils more cautious approach to ChatGPT frenzy
Facebook-owner Meta on Friday unveiled its own version of the artificial intelligence behind apps such as ChatGPT, saying it would give access to researchers to find fixes to the technology's potential dangers.
Meta described its own AI, called LLaMA, as a "smaller, more performant" model designed to "help researchers advance their work," in what could be seen as veiled criticism of Microsoft's decision to release the technology widely, while keeping the programming code secret.
Microsoft-backed ChatGPT has taken the world by storm with its ability to generate finely crafted texts such as essays or poems in just seconds using technology known as large language models (or LLM).
LLM is part of a field known as generative AI that also includes the capacity to execute images, designs or programming code almost instantaneously upon a simple request.
Usually the more staid actor in big tech, Microsoft has deepened its partnership with OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, and earlier this month announced the technology would be integrated into its Bing search engine as well as the Edge browser.
Google, seeing a sudden threat to the dominance of its search engine, quickly announced it would release its own language AI, known as Bard, shortly.
But reports of disturbing exchanges with Microsoft's Bing chatbot -- including it issuing threats and speaking of desires to steal nuclear code or lure one user from his wife -- went viral, raising alarm bells that the technology was not ready.
Meta said these problems, sometimes called hallucinations, could be better remedied if researchers had improved access to the expensive technology.
Thorough research "remains limited because of the resources that are required to train and run such large models," the company said.
This was hindering efforts "to improve their robustness and mitigate known issues, such as bias, toxicity, and the potential for generating misinformation," Meta said.
OpenAI and Microsoft strictly limit access to the technology behind their chatbots, drawing criticism that they are choosing potential profits over improving the technology more quickly for society.
"By sharing the code for LLaMA, other researchers can more easily test new approaches to limiting or eliminating these problems," Meta said.
N.Fournier--BTB