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OpenAI a dévoilé un outil capable de déterminer si un texte a été généré par l'intelligence artificielle (IA) ou par un humain. Toutefois, l’entreprise américaine prévient qu’il n’est pas fiable à 100 %.
ChatGPT inquiète le corps enseignant
Lancée au mois de décembre, ChatGPT est une IA conversationnelle capable de formuler des réponses similaires à celles d’un humain, mais également de reconnaître ses erreurs. Depuis son déploiement, l’outil est plébiscité dans le monde, à tel point que la valorisation de l’entreprise qui l’a développé, OpenAI, a largement augmenté. De son côté, Microsoft a annoncé investir 10 milliards de dollars dans la société, et prévoit d’intégrer ChatGPT à sa suite Azure ainsi qu’à Bing.
Les performances de l’IA inquiètent autant qu’elles fascinent, particulièrement les personnes évoluant dans le secteur de l’éducation, ChatGPT pouvant être utilisé par les élèves pour rédiger des textes. En conséquence, les écoles new-yorkaises ont interdit son utilisation, tout comme Sciences Po en France. Consciente de cette tendance, OpenAI vient donc de dévoiler son nouvel outil.
« Nous savons que l'identification de textes écrits par l'IA a été un point de discussion important parmi les enseignants, et il est tout aussi important de reconnaître les limites et les impacts des classificateurs de textes générés par l'IA en classe », écrit l’entreprise dans sur son blog.
www.oaliv.com/openai-revele-un-outil-qui-detecte-si-un-te...
OpenAI CTO Mira Murati Th'12 received an honorary degree at Dartmouth's Commencement on June 9, 2024 for her pioneering work at the frontlines of artificial intelligence (AI). Murati earned her bachelor of engineering from Thayer School of Engineering at Dartmouth in 2012.
Photo by Eli Burakian ’00
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Sam Altman, chief executive officer of OpenAI, answers questions from thirty students at Office Hours, in the Rackham Graduate School West Conference Room, on the Main Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, on Thursday afternoon, September 12, 2024.
According to Nick Moroz, the director of Entrepreneurial Practice at the College of Engineering’s Center for Entrepreneurship, "Students came prepared with questions spanning a variety of topics, notably around the themes of AI infrastructure, safety, and computational needs. This was a very significant time for such an occasion because it coincided with the launch of OpenAI's newest model o1, otherwise known as Strawberry. Sam was fantastic with the students answering questions from nearly everyone in the room in brief, but dense responses. His insights provided the students with an amazing sense of the path forward for AI research and application given the paradigm-shifting launch of o1 and its novel advancement of reasoning. The students, 10 PhD students and 20 undergrads, were chosen to participate based on their work with AI, including referrals from faculty, participation in the 2023 CFE Generative AI Competition, and the questions that they submitted to OpenAI for consideration.”
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Sam Altman, chief executive officer of OpenAI, answers questions from thirty students at Office Hours, in the Rackham Graduate School West Conference Room, on the Main Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, on Thursday afternoon, September 12, 2024.
According to Nick Moroz, the director of Entrepreneurial Practice at the College of Engineering’s Center for Entrepreneurship, "Students came prepared with questions spanning a variety of topics, notably around the themes of AI infrastructure, safety, and computational needs. This was a very significant time for such an occasion because it coincided with the launch of OpenAI's newest model o1, otherwise known as Strawberry. Sam was fantastic with the students answering questions from nearly everyone in the room in brief, but dense responses. His insights provided the students with an amazing sense of the path forward for AI research and application given the paradigm-shifting launch of o1 and its novel advancement of reasoning. The students, 10 PhD students and 20 undergrads, were chosen to participate based on their work with AI, including referrals from faculty, participation in the 2023 CFE Generative AI Competition, and the questions that they submitted to OpenAI for consideration.”
Photo: Brenda Ahearn/University of Michigan, College of Engineering, Communications and Marketing
Microsoft Teamed up with Elon Musk for “OpenAI project”
rozeniano.blogspot.com/2016/12/microsoft-teamed-up-with-e...
OpenAI chief technology officer and Thayer alum Mira Murati talked with the Dartmouth community about the promises and risks of a future where AI affects everything on June 8, 2024, following Thayer's Investiture ceremony. The conversation was moderated by Dartmouth Trustee Jeffrey Blackburn '91.
Photo by Mark Washburn
OpenAI chief technology officer and Thayer alum Mira Murati talked with the Dartmouth community about the promises and risks of a future where AI affects everything on June 8, 2024, following Thayer's Investiture ceremony. In attendance was Joy Buolamwini, AI Justice League founder and Dartmouth honorary degree recipient.
Photo by Mark Washburn