"ChatGPT is high-tech plagiarism; it undermines education," said Noam Chomsky, American linguist, philosopher, and public intellectual. In an interview with the host of YouTube channel EduKitchen, Chomsky explained: "For years there have been programs that have helped professors detect plagiarized essays," Chomsky says. "Now it’s going to be more difficult, because it’s easier to plagiarize. But that’s about the only contribution to education that I can think of." Chomsky sees the use of ChatGPT as "just a way of avoiding learning." (…) "Students learn absolutely nothing from this." (…) "The way to deal with it is to make education programs interesting enough." Chomsky, 94, author the theory of language acquisition — which argues that human brain structures naturally to learn and use languages — stated that students instinctively employ high technology to avoid learning, "a sign that the educational system is failing." "If it has no appeal to students, doesn’t interest them, doesn’t challenge them, doesn’t make them want to learn, they’ll find ways out," just as he himself did when he borrowed a friend’s notes to pass a dull college chemistry class without attending it back in 1945. After spending most of his career teaching at MIT, Chomsky retired in 2002 to become a full-time public intellectual.
Microsoft Corp rolled out a premium Teams version with features powered by Large Language Models powered by OpenAI’s GPT-3.5 yesterday. This way, Microsoft, which announced a multi-billion dollar investment in OpenAI in January, is setting the stage for more competition with rival Alphabet Inc's Google. Microsoft Teams Premium, which costs $7 per user/month, is "infusing AI throughout the meeting experience," by "generating meeting notes, recommended tasks, and personalized highlights, even if you miss the meeting." • "AI-generated chapters divide the meeting into sections to choose relevant content to save time spent reviewing meeting recordings. This is available today for PowerPoint Live meeting recordings. Intelligent recap will automatically generate meeting chapters based on the meeting transcript as well." • "Microsoft Teams Premium also includes live translations for captions, with AI-powered real-time translations from 40 spoken languages." • "Branded meetings to see the logo and colors of each company on calls will be available in mid-February 2023." • "Advanced meeting protection permits watermarking to deter leaks and limit who can record." Big News 🚨 Microsoft just launched Teams premium powered by ChatGPT at just $7/month 🤯 With ChatGPT, Teams users can generate automatic meeting notes, AI-recommended tasks, personalized meeting templates, and a lot more!! pic.twitter.com/fbzmUc7h8Q — Shubham Saboo (@Saboo_Shubham_) February 2, 2023 Just like that MS teams became 10x better than Zoom. Timeline that shows when someone speaks, automated meeting notes, suggested tasks, full transcript Well done @satyanadella in reeling in @sama and @openai to the fold pic.twitter.com/zg2dsJpkTN — Linus (●ᴗ●) (@LinusEkenstam) February 3, 2023 VoiceBot.AI: New Microsoft Teams Premium Uses ChatGPT to Take Meeting Notes
OpenAI announced yesterday the launch of its premium service, ChatGPT Plus, which is available in the United States for $20 a month. This new subscription plan will grant users access to ChatGPT during peak times with "faster response times and priority access to new features and improvements," according to the company. The premium service is currently in a pilot phase and will be available in the coming weeks. There is a waitlist. in place for now. Previously, OpenAI was considering introducing a plus or pro version of the service at $42 a month, but the price has been lowered to $20 a month to make it more accessible to a wider range of users, including students and businesses that require reliable access to AI-generated text. OpenAI also stated that it will continue to offer free access to ChatGPT "to support free access availability for as many people as possible." We are piloting ChatGPT Plus, a subscription plan that offers faster response times and reliability during peak hours. And of course, the free tier of ChatGPT is still available. https://t.co/2hEBw6h5Se — OpenAI (@OpenAI) February 1, 2023
OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, released yesterday a free web tool, called AI Text Classifier, that detects if a text has been written by AI or not. This solution tries to address concerns, especially in higher education over plagiarism.  ChatGPT. New York schools, for example, have banned this technology on their networks. "The tool is a fine-tuned GPT model that predicts how likely it is that a piece of text was generated by AI from a variety of sources, such as ChatGPT," explained OpenAI. "This classifier is available as a tool to spark discussions on AI literacy." AI Text Classifier requires approximately 150 – 250 words (or a minimum of 1,000 characters) and it isn't always accurate. The text can even be edited easily to evade the classifier and is likely to get things wrong in text written by children. The user simply has to paste the text that he or she would like to check in this URL after logging in. The system will determine if the text was written by a machine, offering a five-point scale of results: Very unlikely to have been AI-generated, unlikely, unclear, possible, or likely. • OpenAI's View on Academic Dishonesty, Plagiarism Detection, and Education Breaking 🚨 OpenAI just launched an AI classifier that can accurately distinguish between AI-generated and human-written text 🤯 pic.twitter.com/jrE08ZQqYZ — Shubham Saboo (@Saboo_Shubham_) January 31, 2023
China's biggest search engine Baidu said yesterday it will launch a ChatGPT-like AI bot in March, according to sources quoted by Reuters and Bloomberg. It will be based on a large-scale machine-learning model developed by the company and trained over several years called Ernie. It will also allow users to get conversation-style search results, similar to OpenAI’s platform. Beijing-based Baidu sees ChatGPT-like apps as a potential way to leapfrog rivals, according to analysts. It seems that Baidu — China's Google — plans to launch the AI service as a standalone application and gradually merge it into its search engine, said a person to Reuters. The idea of Baidu seems to point out incorporating chatbot-generated results when users make search requests, instead of only links. Chatbots in China currently focus on social interaction, whereas ChatGPT performs better at more professional tasks, such as programming and essay writing. Baidu has been investing heavily in AI technology, including in cloud services, chips, and autonomous driving, as it looks to diversify its revenue sources. The news of Baidu’s plans sent shares up by 5.8%, the largest intraday gain in almost four weeks. “next six to 12 months will bring an explosion of experimentation, especially once companies are able to build on top of ChatGPT using OpenAI’s API. And the killer use case that emerges could be around generative AI’s impact on knowledge management. https://t.co/da2dyucwWr — Adam.GPT (@TheRealAdamG) January 30, 2023