Technology

ChatGPT: Popular ‘AI writer’ to come with $20 monthly subscription

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The free version will continue to be available, and the company said it hopes subscription revenue will support open access to its system.

The American artificial intelligence company OpenAI, which has developed the increasingly popular internationally “smart” tool ChatGPT, which writes demanding texts (and more) on demand, has announced that it is starting to pilot the services of the chatbot for a monthly subscription of 20 dollars.

Subscribers, initially only in the US, will have access to the ChatGPT Plus platform even during peak periods (something difficult for the free version), faster response times from the software and priority access to new features and improvements .

The free (free) version will continue to be available, and the company said it hopes subscription revenue will support open access to its system, as today every time the chatbot is used, it incurs a small cost to the company.

San Francisco-based Open AI introduced ChatGPT in November 2022, and since then public interest around the world has been gradually increasing. The experimental online tool can – as if it were an expert – answer convincingly to various questions, write texts on everything scientific (suitable for publication even in scientific journals), write poems and songs, etc.

His ability is due to the fact that he draws a wealth of information from the Internet, which he then processes and combines, imitating the style of a doctor, a journalist, a student, a rock star, etc. The company has not provided data on how many times its tool has been used worldwide to date. Apart from using it out of curiosity or for entertainment, many people use it for their real needs.

In fact, there is widespread concern in the educational and scientific community that students and researchers are secretly using it and exploiting it in their work. On the other hand, cybersecurity experts worry that ChatGPT might write its own malware for hackers.

Open AI has announced that it has just released another “smart” tool that it claims can detect whether a text was written by a human or by artificial intelligence software.

However, according to the BBC, the New York Times and Reuters, some experts believe that such chatbots are the future of search engines, that is, artificial intelligence will search the Internet and “serve” a ready answer to a user’s query , instead of links to related websites – which is sure to be of great help to anyone looking for anything.

On the other hand, so far ChatGPT does not disclose where it got its information from, so a question mark is raised about the reliability of its sources. There are already examples of disinformation presented as facts by the chatbot.

Many other companies are developing similar AI tools, such as Google’s Lamda, which is considered highly persuasive, but has not yet been released to the public for free use.

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