1. Microsoft will launch Web AI with commercial data protection on December 1
According to Microsoft’s official website, Microsoft Copilot’s Web AI chat feature with commercial privacy will be officially released on December 1 this year. Microsoft’s official page shows that Copilot is available in more than 160 regions.
To find out more, please read: https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/bing/chat/enterprise/?form=MA13FV
2. Musk’s AI model Grok will open to X Premium+ subscribers next week
Musk recently posted on the X social platform that the AI model Grok will be available to all X Premium+ subscribers next week.
It is reported that Grok can engage in intelligent, humorous, and multitasking conversations with users and make personalized recommendations based on user’s interests and needs; it can access the massive amount of data on the X platform in real-time, from which it learns and understands the latest trending topics and events; it supports extra-long prompts, fast response, and simultaneous output of multiple conversations; it can allow users to select different voice tones and personalities; and it is planned to increase the number of images in the future generation, image recognition, audio recognition, and other multimodal capabilities, and can also run locally in Tesla cars using on-board computing power.
To find out more: https://grok.x.ai/
3. Meta Moves Most RAI Team Employees to Generative AI
According to an internal Meta post, Meta has split up the Responsible AI (RAI) team and moved most of the team’s employees to the Generative AI team as the company shifts more resources to generative AI work, according to a Nov. 19 report from The Information. The move is part of a broader reorganization of the AI team, which Meta announced internally last week.
4. F1 Racing Trials AI to Tackle Track Limit Violations
Formula One’s governing body is trialing AI to tackle track limit violations at this weekend’s Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Reuters reported. The Paris-based FIA says it will use “computer vision” technology to count the number of pixels beyond the edge of the track through shape analysis, and that AI will classify genuine violations where all four wheels of a driver cross the white line at the edge of the track, reducing the workload of the FIA’s Remote Operations Center (ROC) and speeding up its response. This will reduce the workload of the FIA’s Remote Operations Center (ROC) and speed up the response time.
5. OpenAI launches investigation into elevated ChatGPT error rates
On November 23rd, local time, OpenAI updated its operational note to say that it was conducting an investigation into the elevated error rate of ChatGPT. Officials then stated that the issue had been identified, a fix had been implemented, and they continued monitoring the impact.
6. Tesla Rolls Out FSD V12 to Employees
Elon Musk, CEO of Tesla, has confirmed the internal rollout of the Full Self-Driving (FSD) V12 to employees on the social media platform X, formerly known as Twitter. This first release of the highly anticipated update is reportedly more limited than previous versions.FSD V12 is said to eliminate more than 300,000 lines of code, indicating a shift toward neural networks and less reliance on hard-coded programming. Musk demonstrated the update in a livestream, showing a Tesla Model S smoothly navigating Palo Alto with minimal intervention.The release to Tesla employees suggests that a wider release to regular Tesla owners may be imminent. FSD is a key selling point and safety system for Tesla’s electric cars.