Menlo Park, California – Working to differentiate itself in the busy field of artificial intelligence, Meta Platforms has launched an independent application, with a social networks component, to compete with the OpenAi chatgpt.
The goal AI application, built with the company calls 4 ai. It includes a “discover” feed that allows users to see how others interact with AI. It also has a voice mode to interact with AI.
“It is intelligent that Meta differentiates its Chatgpt competitor, taking out the company’s social networks.
By allowing users to link their Facebook and Instagram accounts, the goal AI application “gets an advantage to instantly customize their user experience with the context of social networks.”
Goal has adopted a different approach to the AI that many of its rivals, Freeing him for free as an open source product. The company says that more than one billion people use their products ai every month.
At the inaugural conference of the Menlo Park Technology Giant, California, Llamasacon, on Tuesday, Meta Ceo, Mark Zuckerberg, he spoke with the Microsoft CEO, Satya Nadella, in a technical discussion on the speed of the development of AI and how technology is changing to its companies, where AI is already writing code, as well as the world.
Recognizing that there is a lot of “exaggeration” around AI, Zuckerberg said: “If this will lead to mass increases in productivity, that should be reflected in large increases in GDP.”
“This will take several years, many years, to play,” said Zuckerberg. “I am curious to know how you think, what is your current perspective of what we should look for to understand the progress that this is doing?”
Nadella raised the advent of electricity, saying that “AI has the promise, but now you have to really offer real change in productivity, and that requires software and also a change of management, right? Because, in a sense, people have to work with him differently.”
He said they spent 50 years before people discovered change the way factories operated with electricity.
Zuckerberg replied: “Well, we are all investing as if they won’t last 50 years, so I hope you don’t take 50 years.”