SShortSingh.
Back to feed

Government Safety Review Process for OpenAI Frontier Model Remains Opaque

0
·1 views

The U.S. government conducted a safety review before approving the release of OpenAI's latest frontier AI model, but the details of that process have not been made public. Similar consultations were reportedly held with AI companies Anthropic and OpenAI, though the nature of those discussions remains unclear. It is unknown what criteria or benchmarks were used to determine the model met safety standards. The lack of transparency has raised questions about how rigorously frontier AI models are evaluated before receiving government clearance for public release.

Read the full story at TechCrunch

This is an AI-generated summary. ShortSingh links to the original source for the complete article.

Discussion (0)

Log in to join the discussion and vote.

Log in

Related stories

0
TechnologyThe Verge ·

Google adds AI disclosure labels to ads on Search, Discover, and YouTube

Google has introduced a new label in its My Ad Center that tells users when an ad was created or edited using artificial intelligence. The update, announced on Thursday, adds a 'created or edited with AI' tag under the 'how this ad was made' section. Users can access this information by tapping the three dots or info button on any ad across Google Search, Google Discover, and YouTube. Google will automatically apply the label to ads built with its own generative AI tools, while ads made using third-party AI platforms will require manual labeling by advertisers.

0
TechnologyTechCrunch ·

Precursor Ventures' Charles Hudson reveals top fundraising mistakes from 500+ investments

Charles Hudson, managing partner at Precursor Ventures, appeared on the Build Mode podcast to discuss challenges facing early-stage startup founders. He spoke with host Isabelle Johannessen about the current headwinds making fundraising difficult in today's climate. Drawing on his experience investing in over 500 startups, Hudson outlined the most common mistakes founders make when seeking funding. His insights aim to help early-stage entrepreneurs improve their chances of securing investment.

0
TechnologyArs Technica ·

Judge Reluctantly Approves Musk's $1.5M SEC Settlement Over Twitter Stock Violation

A federal judge has approved a $1.5 million settlement between Elon Musk and the Securities and Exchange Commission related to a Twitter stock disclosure violation. The judge expressed personal reservations about the deal but acknowledged the court lacked authority to block it. The case stemmed from Musk's alleged failure to properly disclose his acquisition of a significant stake in Twitter within the required timeframe. Despite the judge's dissatisfaction, the settlement stands as legally binding under existing regulatory framework.