Common Sense is a nonprofit organization focused on making technology safe and accessible to children, with the goal of helping parents, children, and educators better understand the risks and benefits of technology. We are working on developing an AI rating and review system. Among the questions Common Sense hopes to answer include whether AI fosters young people’s desire to learn, whether it respects human rights and children’s rights, and whether the technology could perpetuate the spread of misinformation. There are many examples.
The goal of the new partnership is to help create AI guidelines and educational materials for children, educators, and parents, and to develop “family-friendly” GPT-branded Large Language Models (LLMs) that align with Common Sense assessments and standards. It’s about supporting curation. GPT is the backbone of OpenAI’s ChatGPT chatbot released in late 2022.
Jim Steyer, CEO of Common Sense Media, said in a statement that the educational materials developed through the partnership are aimed at “educating families and educators on the safe and responsible use of ChatGPT and the use of this emerging technology.” “We will enable us to collectively avoid the unintended consequences of this.”
At Monday’s event, Altman spoke briefly about the partnership and AI more broadly, saying he hopes it will “benefit children” who don’t have access to AI. Part of OpenAI’s mission is to “make really useful AI available for free,” he said.
In September, Craig Newmark Philanthropies, the philanthropic arm of the Craigslist founder, announced it had donated $3 million to fund Common Sense artificial intelligence and education efforts. Newmark told CNBC at the time that some of the concerns about AI include the possibility that malicious actors could use the technology to influence the information ecosystem and foment public discontent. he said.
OpenAI and Common Sense do not say how the LLM will be tailored to support educators and youth. Altman said an LLM customized for educational purposes could help teens “who want to learn about science or who want to learn about biology.”
“I think we still don’t know exactly how people want to use it,” Altman said. He added that he envisions a world where “every teen or every adult has a personalized AI.”
Regarding the upcoming election and the potential risks posed by so-called deepfakes to confuse people, Altman acknowledged that AI-generated images pose a problem, but said, “People are more sensitive than we believe. I think it’s much more sophisticated, and I don’t believe it all.” The image you see. ”
He talked about how OpenAI is preparing for the ways that bad actors could take advantage of AI.
“We have taken massive response measures,” he said. “This will be monitored very closely.”
clock: Microsoft-OpenAI created the biggest hype campaign in the history of technology