When it was launched, Google's AI chatbot Bard didn't exactly have a clean landing. Bard was introduced to compete with ChatGPT, but soon after its inception, it came under fire for being inaccurate and for a factual mistake in its introductory campaign. At about the same time, news of Google's press conference gaffe in Paris started to circulate. The business was mortified when a demo phone mysteriously vanished, raising suspicions that the event lacked preparation. Also, it was recently revealed that Google was training Bard using the data from ChatGPT. Google has categorically denied these rumors. Sam Altman, OpenAI's CEO, claims that he is not offended by Google's usage of ChatGPT data.
Sam Altman stated, "I'm not that furious with Google for training on ChatGPT output, but the spin is frustrating," in a tweet.
According to a report by The Information, Google trained Bard using ChatGPT's data, which it acquired via the website ShareGPT. But the tech giant denied these claims in a response to The Verge. According to spokesman Chris Pappas, "Bard is not trained on any data from ShareGPT or ChatGPT."
The Information's report also covered how Jacob Devlin, a former Google AI developer, left the organization to work for OpenAI. According to reports, the former Google employee "warned Google to not utilize ChatGPT's data as it would violate OpenAI's service restrictions." Also, a source informed The Information that following the former employee's 'warnings,' Google ceased utilizing ChatGPT's data.
Google CEO Sundar Pichai also addressed reports that Google was in a "code red" state following ChatGPT's arrival. He said that he was never one to declare a "code red" event. He did, however, add that it's possible that other employees of the business "send emails claiming there is a code red."
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