Beyond Tomorrow: More Exits At OpenAI, Anonymous Chatbot Enters The Arena — Weekly AI Roundup

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Welcome back!

Heavy hitters in tech sure as hell made the news this week. Some of it is great, some is eye-catching, and some is just plain intriguing. Let's see what we've got, shall we?

Arguably the world's most prominent AI company, OpenAI, saw two high-profile exits from the firm this week and one hiatus, first reported by The Information. And they're not exactly minor exits, either.

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At the same time, however, there's a rumour that OpenAI might just be preparing a brand new model to show off. Founder Sam Altman cryptically posted an image of strawberries on X, which is supposedly the codename for the company's new model.

In a big win for regulators, Google has been ruled a monopoly by a US District Court judge. In a 277-page ruling, Judge Amit Mehta found that by signing exclusivity agreements with equipment makers, developers, and network carriers to make its search engine the default, it had violated anti-trust laws. Mehta's ruling, which Google plans to appeal, now opens a new remedial phase of the trial. While the process might be lengthy, we might see the company being forced to break itself into multiple companies.

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High Profile Exits From OpenAI

Thank you DJ KHaled, very cool (Source: tenor.com)

It seems like after last year's brouhaha at OpenAI, things internally have been a bit of a mess. This week, OpenAI saw two high profile exits while one of its executives announced that they would be on hiatus till the end of the year, as reported by The Information.

OpenAI co-founder John Schulman has left the company, as has product manager Peter Deng. The former's announcement has set chins wagging. Deng's departure was unrelated, according to The Information.

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Schulman's exit isn't exactly subtle, either; he's moving to OpenAI's bitter rival, Anthropic.

The computer scientist posted on X that his choice to leave the company “stems from my desire to deepen my focus on AI alignment” and that he wants to return to “hands-on technical work”. It reads like a damning statement, but Schulman says that his decision was not because of a “lack of support for alignment research at OpenAI.”

They're conflicting messages, to say the least. But the UC Berkley-educated Schulman reiterated that his decision was a “personal one” for the “next phase of his career.”

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