Although chatbots may now speak, experts caution that they may also be listening.

 

Now that ChatGPT, a well-known artificial intelligence platform, can respond to spoken words and visuals, several experts are worried that this can result in unwelcome privacy violations.

 


According to a New York Times report, OpenAI, the firm that created ChatGPT, unveiled the updated chatbot on Monday, enabling it to communicate with people orally for the first time.

 

According to Peter Deng, vice president of consumer and enterprise product at OpenAI, "We're looking to make ChatGPT easier to use -- and more helpful."

 

GOOGLE'S AI IS PUSHING NEW DAILY AI FEATURES TO ONE-UP CHATGPT AND BING

 

On a mobile device, users can see the chat programs Microsoft Bing Chat and ChatGPT AI.  

 

Users of ChatGPT will be able to converse with the software in a spoken voice similar to famous platforms like Apple's Siri and Amazon's Alexa. The report mentioned that users might post a picture of their open refrigerator and ChatGPT would answer with recipe suggestions based on what is inside. This means that ChatGPT will also be able to respond to images.

 

Even while OpenAI has been aggressively releasing new AI tools lately, some professionals questioned the improved ChatGPT's practicality.

 


 The capabilities of ChatGPT are not truly improved by speech detection and conversational capability, despite their great sounding nature, according to Christopher Alexander, chief analytics officer of Pioneer Development Group, in a statement to Fox News Digital. Essentially, dictating your Natural Language Processing commands is an option rather than typing them.

 

 Alexander cautioned that users of the modified platform will need to take certain things into account and said that doing so could make the platform more capable of being used as a "surveillance tool."

 

IS CHATGPT WHAT?

 

Alexander remarked, "You now have ChatGPT listening to you and gathering more data."

 

He continued, "When you are speaking to ChatGPT, it is learning how to better process voices by pitch, accent, etc." "The voice training people give the AI could aid ChatGPT in creating remarkably lifelike voice capabilities."

 


Similar worries were voiced by Ziven Havens, the policy director at the Bull Moose Project, who told Fox News Digital that the program might be a part of a wider movement to "collect unprecedented levels of data on Americans."

 

 

The opportunity for businesses like OpenAI to gather more data, including American voices and the images they provide to ChatGPT, has risen along with AI, according to Havens. To prevent Americans from giving up their privacy in the name of innovation, Congress must take action.

 

 

The new invention has "huge creative potential," said to Jon Schweppe, policy director of the American Principles Project, but he cautioned that it "may also open the door for more profound fakes and make it exponentially more difficult to discriminate between AI voice

 


"Clearly, data collecting is the main issue here. In the very near future, ChatGPT is anticipated to develop remarkably lifelike speech skills for AI personas as it "trains" to better understand voices by pitch, accent, and other factors, according to Schweppe.

 


While utilizing ChatGPT's new features, users may be reminded of Siri or Alexa, the study pointed out that the two platforms employ distinct kinds of technologies. ChatGPT uses a huge language model that can learn to provide more responses by analyzing vast amounts of data from the internet, in contrast to Alexa and Siri, which are preprogrammed to carry out a predetermined number of tasks or provide specific answers.

 

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