All things AI seem to979 Archivesmoving at light speed over the past year. New AI companies and AI-powered mobile apps, web services, and features have seemingly been rolled out everyday ever since OpenAI's ChatGPT debuted late last year.
But, there is one area where the current leader of the space, OpenAI, is slowing down: Training of its next language model.
In a discussion at a conference hosted by the Economic Timesin India, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman explained that the company hasn't even yet started working on its next model, GPT-5.
"We have a lot of work to do before GPT-5," Altman said. "It takes a lot of time. We are certainly not close to it."
SEE ALSO: What not to share with ChatGPT if you use it for workBack in March, one thousand tech luminaries such as Apple's Steve Wozniak and Elon Musk signeda petition calling for a six-month pause in training AI language models "more powerful than GPT-4," which is OpenAI's most recently released model.
The letter called on AI training to continue only when " we are confident that their effects will be positive and their risks will be manageable."
Altman appeared to hint that concerns around AI factored in somewhat to OpenAI's decision not to begin work on GPT-5.
"There needs to be more safety audits," he said at the conference.
But there are other reasons too. Namely, many of the big platforms and tech companies which OpenAI used to train their models aren't thrilled that the company's success is based off their freely available content and data. Companies like Reddit have begun instituting high-priced API subscription plans, specifically in response to AI training.
As for when GPT-5 will come out, that remains to be seen. OpenAI releasedGPT-4 just this past March.
"I wish I could tell you about the timeline of the next GPT," said Altman.
Topics Artificial Intelligence ChatGPT OpenAI
'The Last of Us' episode 7 paid perfect homage to the game's photo booth scene'Everything Everywhere All at Once' has swept the SAG AwardsThere are so many good tweets about the U.S. Space Force uniformHow to clean and care for your jade rollerMeta will create 'AI personas' for WhatsApp and MessengerCoronavirus conspiracy theories spread panic and dangerous misinformationReview: Emma Chamberlain's steeped coffee pods are expensive but goodWordle today: Here's the answer, hints for March 2Twitter sued by at least six companies for not paying billsChrissy Teigen's impression of Luigi hunting ghosts is absolutely on pointShakira's halftime Super Bowl tongue is now a wonderful memeWhy you're probably paying too much for internet that's too slow'The Last of Us' episode 7 paid perfect homage to the game's photo booth scene'Stranger Things' is getting an official West End playElon Musk looking to create an AI chatbot to compete with OpenAI's ChatGPTI was tired of slowMicrosoft builds Bing AI search into Windows 11Posting photos of what you cook is a net good'The Last of Us' episode 7 paid perfect homage to the game's photo booth scenePosting photos of what you cook is a net good Richard Branson: Business leaders are 'baffled' by Trump on climate change Liam Payne and Louis Tomlinson join celebs in Grenfell Tower single Netflix's 'Love on the Spectrum' will give you butterflies: Review Donald Trump says he doesn't want a 'poor person' in the cabinet Apple macOS beta code hints at Face ID coming to Mac computers Taylor Swift's 'folklore' is a massive hit on Spotify and Apple Music Xbox stirs hope for the future with a slew of new game trailers Face masks often aren't enough to defeat facial recognition, study finds Garmin confirms massive cyber attack connected to Russian hackers Google to replace certain Nest thermostats that can't connect to Wi WNBA teams walk out during anthem, dedicate season to Breonna Taylor Fan stops traffic to get a selfie with The Rock Tesla nabs $65 million tax break to build Cybertruck factory in Austin Uber users know about everything that's going down, and they're not happy Elon Musk announces next Tesla factory location No, Wonder Woman wasn’t paid millions less than Superman Man invents tsunami sensor, internet obsesses over his dog Keyless entry is key to stealing other people's cars for European crime ring Twitter reportedly gave more than 1,000 people access to its admin panel before hack Facebook has a new mission—and its Chris Cox's job to make it happen
3.0142s , 10106.328125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【1979 Archives】,Openness Information Network