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Could the new GPT-4o from OpenAI cost you your job?

Could the new GPT-4o from OpenAI cost you your job?

Microsoft-backed OpenAI finally unveiled their magical product on Monday in a much-awaited launch. CEO Sam Altman claimed the business had worked nonstop on it.

In an effort to broaden its ChatGPT offerings, San Francisco-based startup OpenAI has introduced GPT-4o, an artificial intelligence (AI) driven chatbot that can identify human emotions.

Real-time cameras will be used to detect the GPT-4o, and demo videos have been flooding the internet. Some users have expressed concern that the system will prey on multiple jobs.

Experts told Business Insider that, despite initial worries, it is unlikely that these goods would cause problems, adding that the demo on Monday might not have fully revealed the new AI product’s potential.

The most recent audio version of GPT-4o may enable users to communicate with them, answer their questions, and impart translating skills.

Additionally, OpenAI has a number of demo films up on its website that demonstrate users engaging with the AI chatbot by issuing orders. The updated system may also use a camera to detect its surroundings and provide you with your current location.

In the company’s website demo film, Mira Murati, the chief technology officer, is seen requesting help from GPT-4o along with other staff members.

It’s premature to draw conclusions, according to Ben Leong, a computer science professor at the National University of Singapore.

It will be challenging for AI to replace human customer service, education, or negotiating, though.

Even in ChatGPT’s more recent iterations, according to Simon Lucey, head of the Australian Institute for Machine Learning at the University of Adelaide, the program still produces mistakes when multiplying numbers with three digits or more.

“At the end of the day… you still need to get a human to cast desire over what it’s producing,” said Lucey.

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