The strategies that Elon Musk has for his own AI company are beginning to take shape. The Twitter President said that he needs to “create a third option” for an organization that could challenge OpenAI and Google.
Musk stated in an interview with Fox News that he would like to refer to the company as “TruthGPT” and that the objective would be to develop a “maximum truth-seeking AI that tries to understand the nature of the universe” and that “hopefully does more good than harm.”
Musk acknowledged that because he was “starting late,” he would be starting at a significant disadvantage compared to his rivals. Also, as is much of the time the case, it’s indistinct the way that serious or far along his arrangements really are. Yet, hypothesis about Musk’s simulated intelligence desires has been mounting as he as of late recorded desk work for a business called X.AI Corp. He additionally purportedly purchased great many GPUs and employed scientists from DeepMind for an obscure Twitter simulated intelligence project. It’s hazy on the off chance that the two drives are connected. Musk has been known to transfer workers between his businesses.
Musk claimed that he was motivated by worries about AI’s future direction and potential threat to humanity. He was particularly a pioneering backer of OpenAI, which he helped establish in 2015. However, a reported disagreement with Sam Altman regarding who would run the organization led Musk to distance himself from the organization. He has recently criticized OpenAI for working with Microsoft and spinning off a business for profit.
Although Musk teased one upcoming Twitter feature, it is unclear how Musk’s AI plans will affect the service. He stated that Twitter was developing a feature that would “hopefully coming out later month, but no later than next month.” This feature would enable users to optionally encrypt direct messages.
Encrypted direct messaging has been a rumor for a long time, and Musk, who is well-known to be a fan of encrypted messaging apps, has previously stated that Twitter ought to provide encryption in the manner of Signal. You can turn encryption on so that no one at Twitter can see what you’re saying in a conversation you think might be sensitive, Musk explained.
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