Danny's workmate is called GPT-3. You've probably read its work without realising it's an AI
Technology reporter James Purtill wrote this article published today by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
For @Sciborg_S_Patel
Technology reporter James Purtill wrote this article published today by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
For @Sciborg_S_Patel
Quote:You may not have heard of GPT-3, but there's a good chance you've read its work, used a website that runs its code, or even conversed with it through a chatbot or a character in a game.
GPT-3 is an AI model — a type of artificial intelligence — and its applications have quietly trickled into our everyday lives over the past couple of years.
In recent months, that trickle has picked up force: more and more applications are using AI like GPT-3, and these AI programs are producing greater amounts of data, from words, to images, to code.
Quote:"Writers are expensive. And there's a limit to how much quality content a human can produce," Mr Mahoney says.
"You can get the same quality of content using AI tools. You just get it faster."
How much faster? About three times, he estimates.
He still has to check and edit the AI-generated text, but it's less work and he's cut his rates by half.
Quote:Companies like ContentBot and Longshot pay OpenAI for access to GPT-3: the rate of the most popular model (Davinci) is about $US0.06 per 750 words.
In March 2021, GPT-3 was generating an average of 4.5 billion words per day.
Quote:In general, GPT-3 is remarkably good at stringing sentences together, though plays fast and loose with the facts.
Asked to write about the 2022 Australian election, it claimed the vote would be held on July 2.