OpenAI is offering upto $200,000 for improving its AI chatbot, ChatGPT

OpenAI is offering upto $200,000 for improving its AI chatbot, ChatGPT

The stunning success of ChatGPT has propelled OpenAI to the forefront of the AI competition. Google, on the other hand, is a formidable competitor. The greatest way to beat the competition is to improve your products, which OpenAI has done. It has urged users to uncover flaws in its artificial intelligence systems. And the corporation will compensate you for your services.

The success of ChatGPT has served as a wake-up call for OpenAI’s competitors. Organizations such as Google have been working on artificial intelligence and machine learning for some time, but OpenAI was the first to build a commercial product. Google’s response, Bard, has yet to make an impact. On the other hand, OpenAI cannot take that for granted, as Google has vowed to improve its product.

OpenAI will pay up to $200,000 for bug discovery

OpenAI has devised a method for improving its AI systems: a Bug Bounty program. The company is prepared to offer up to $200,000 to users who disclose flaws in ChatGPT and the OpenAI system architecture. The lowest reward is $200, whereas the greatest incentive is $200,000 for “exceptional discoveries.”

The importance of transparency and collaboration cannot be overstated: OpenAI

According to OpenAI, the program is being implemented because the company feels that “transparency and collaboration” are critical to uncovering flaws in its systems. Surprisingly, the move comes just days after ChatGPT was outlawed in Italy. Other European countries are looking into the possibility of chatbots breaching privacy standards. The program “is an essential part of our commitment to developing safe and advanced AI,” OpenAI said.

To improve performance, Google has sought human help

It is not new to seek human intervention to develop artificial intelligence. When Bard made the famed factual error during its demo, Google asked its employees to work on improving the chatbot. Sundar Pichai, the company’s CEO, urged Google employees to volunteer two to four hours to help enhance Bard. Prabhakar Raghavan, Google’s VP of Search, also requested Googlers to double-check that Bard’s answers are correct.

OpenAI employs more human trainers than Google

Although Google solicited the assistance of its employees, OpenAI seeks the assistance of all. The involvement of a greater number of human trainers provides OpenAI an added advantage. Surprisingly, OpenAI’s move to enlist the help of bug hunters comes only days after Google opened an ‘Experimentupdates’ page for Bard.

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