Since OpenAI’s ChatGPT was released in November 2022, tech experts, media, and governments have expressed worry over what it could become in the hands of bad
A group of artists who say they were given early access to OpenAI's Sora video generation model released a version of the tool to the public.
The lawsuit, brought by the CBC, Globe and Mail and others, shows how the battle over copyright and AI is expanding beyond the U.S.
Many great AI video generators have emerged since Sora blew people away, but it's hard not to feel like a kid with their nose pressed up against the glass of the toy store, wondering why we can't play with the toys just a little bit. Here's why I think OpenAI and the rest of the reticent AI video creation models are still locked away.
In the fast-moving world of AI, competition is heating up—and nowhere is this more evident than in the battle over advanced reasoning models. In just the past few days, three new AI models from Chinese developers—Deepseek R1 (HighFlyer Capital Management),
OpenAI is funding academic research into algorithms that can predict humans’ moral judgements.
ChatGPT developer OpenAI aims to reach 1 billion weekly active users next year, the Financial Times reports.It plans to launch a new artificial intelligence
In a Stanford study, a two-hour interview was all it took for an AI to accurately predict people’s responses to a barrage of questions.
OpenAI's upcoming AI-powered video maker, Sora, appears to have leaked. These are some examples of what this AI tool can create.
A coalition of Canadian news publishers, including The Canadian Press, Torstar, Globe and Mail, Postmedia and CBC/Radio-Canada, has filed a lawsuit against OpenAI for using news content to train its ChatGPT generative artificial intelligence system.