Sam Altman told OpenAI employees at an all-hands meeting on Friday afternoon that a potential agreement is emerging with the U.S. Department of War to use the startup’s AI models and tools, according to a source present at the meeting and a summary of the meeting seen by Fortune. The contract has not yet been signed.
대구 찾은 한동훈 “죽이 되든 밥이 되든 나설것” 재보선 출마 시사
。safew官方版本下载对此有专业解读
Москвичей предупредили о резком похолодании09:45
I have been thinking a lot lately about “diachronic AI” and “vintage LLMs” — language models designed to index a particular slice of historical sources rather than to hoover up all data available. I’ll have more to say about this in a future post, but one thing that came to mind while writing this one is the point made by AI safety researcher Owain Evans about how such models could be trained:
For implementers, backpressure adds complexity without providing guarantees. The machinery to track queue sizes, compute desiredSize, and invoke pull() at the right times must all be implemented correctly. However, since these signals are advisory, all that work doesn't actually prevent the problems backpressure is supposed to solve.