OpenAI Calls Microsoft In A Hurry To Integrate GPT-4 To Bing Chat, This Is The Result!
Microsoft has launched Bing Chat. (photo; dock. Pexels)

JAKARTA - Since Microsoft launched its Bing Chat, not a few complaints have come up with a fairly strange chatbot response. Apparently, the company was too hasty in integrating GPT-4 technology.

OpenAI's GPT-4 at that time was still in the development stage. However, the ChatGPT leader has reportedly warned his partner Microsoft not to rush to bring the GPT-4 into Bing Chat in order to avoid inaccurate responses.

Sure enough, a few days after Bing Chat was launched in February, users found chatbots unpredictable by insulting users, deceiving them, blaming people, and claiming to identify their enemies.

As a result, Microsoft quickly limited the number of daily chat turn and chats in sessions to a small number. Although now, the company is again expanding the chat limit.

Through an unnamed source, The Wall Street Journal (WSJ) reported, OpenAI expressed concern that Microsoft was moving too quickly to launch Bing Chat with this issue. Those concerns turned out to be very accurate.

Microsoft has long invested in OpenAI which provides it with early access to ChatGPT and DALL-E 2 to upgrade its Bing search engine and other products amid competition with Google.

However, under the disbursement of the billions of dollars, OpenAI can still license ChatGPT-4 to other companies so they can develop their own AI products.

According to WSJ, the partnership between the two sides is somewhat unique which causes some behind-the-scenes conflicts, as they simultaneously support and compete with each other.

Microsoft employees are said to have also complained about the lack of direct access to the OpenAI model for researchers and engineers. The company is not getting much benefit from this partnership.

In fact, employees were also reportedly surprised to see how quickly OpenAI launched a ChatGPT in November last year.

"I feel OpenAI is pursuing the same thing as us. So instead of trying to train five different basic models, I want one basis, making it the basis for platform effects," said Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella in an interview with Wired.

"So we partnered. They bet on us, we bet on them," he added.

Unfortunately, when asked if Nadella plans to buy OpenAI so there will no longer be competition, she chooses to remain silent. This was quoted from The Verge and Engadget, Wednesday, June 14.


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