A president's State of the Union address has a predictable formula. But what if a computer program were to write it? The Associated Press asked the ChatGPT bot to do just that.
Welcome to NerdWallet’s Smart Money podcast, where we answer your real-world money questions. This week’s episode starts with testing out ChatGPT’s ability to give financial advice.
The maker of ChatGPT is trying to curb its reputation as a freewheeling cheating machine with a new tool that can help teachers detect if a student or artificial intelligence wrote that homework.
This week saw several newly announced AI search chatbots — Google's Bard, Baidu's Ernie Bot and Microsoft's Bing chatbot. But glitches abound, including inaccurate answers and a phenomenon known as AI "hallucination." Here's a closer look.
Among sermon writers, there is fascination — and unease — over the abilities of artificial-intelligence chatbots. For now, the consensus is this: Yes, they can write a competent sermon. But no, they can’t replicate the passion of actual preaching.
Microsoft’s Bing search engine can write recipes and songs and explain anything it can find on the internet. But if you cross its artificially intelligent chatbot, it might also insult your looks, threaten your reputation or compare you to Adolf Hitler.
Even if you haven't tried artificial intelligence tools that can write essays and poems or conjure new images on command, chances are the companies that make your household products are already starting to do so.
Wall Street’s building frenzy around artificial intelligence helped yank the market higher, even as worries worsen about political rancor in Washington.
Leading scientists and tech industry leaders are warning about the perils artificial intelligence poses to humankind, saying “mitigating the risk of extinction from AI should be a global priority alongside other societal-scale risks such as pandemics and nuclear war.”
Lawmakers are beginning to consider ways in which artificial intelligence systems are involved in inventive processes like discovery of new drugs, and how the use of such technologies affects what is — and is not — patentable.
Google’s new Gemini AI app will enable people to quickly connect to a digital brain that can write for them, interpret what they’re reading and seeing, even help manage their lives.