91精品在线观看国产-一级毛片免费看全集-三级黄日含免费的-欧美一级a做一级a做片性-黄色一级毛片黄片库-美国一级黄片操逼-免费二级毛片完整视频-国产精品久久久久久一级毛片男模-一级A做一级A做在线观看AV

【kari koca porno izlemek caiz midir】Open AI and Google trained AI models on YouTube videos

【kari koca porno izlemek caiz midir】Open AI and Google trained AI models on YouTube videos

Both OpenAI and kari koca porno izlemek caiz midirGoogle turned to transcribing YouTube videos to further train their AI models, which may violate creators' copyrights, theNew York Timesreports. The report details how the two tech giants, along with Meta, cut corners to access as much data as possible to train their AI models.

SEE ALSO: OpenAI's Sora just dropped a trippy music video to fan the AI hype flames

According to the report, OpenAI used Whisper, a speech recognition tool, to transcribe more than one million hours of YouTube videos. It then fed the transcripts into GPT-4, the powerful AI system that the latest model of ChatGPT's chatbot runs on. Google, which owns YouTube, also transcribed YouTube videos to train its AI models.

The transcription of videos by both companies may infringe on creator's copyrights to their videos. Other uses of creator content to train AI has prompted copyright and licensing lawsuits.

Mashable Light Speed Want more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories? Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter. By clicking Sign Me Up, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Thanks for signing up!

You May Also Like

OpenAI's use of YouTube videos also may violate Google's rules, which prohibits the use of its videos for "independent" applications and "automated means (such as robots, botnets or scrapers)" of accessing its videos.

Matt Bryant, a spokesperson for Google, told the New York Times that the company was unaware of any such use by OpenAI. But the report alleges that people at Google knew about OpenAI's unauthorized use of YouTube videos and neglected to take action because it was doing the same thing. Google also told the paper that it only trains its AI on videos from creators who have agreed for their content to be used in this manner.


Related Stories
  • Zola's wedding planner tool is AI you can say 'yes' to
  • Google is funding AI tools for nonprofits, including the World Bank
  • Google agrees to delete billions of Incognito mode data records
  • ChatGPT no longer requires an account to use it. Here's how OpenAI plans to handle the mass adoption.

In July 2023, Google changed its terms of service to allow the use public online material like Google Docs and Google Maps restaurant reviews to further train its AI models.

Topics Artificial Intelligence Google YouTube OpenAI

Comments

Leave a Comment