Coinbase CEO considers stopping the chatgpt development as a bad idea

Coinbase CEO considers stopping the chatgpt development as a bad idea
Chatgpt has hit waves worldwide since its introduction in November 2022. The famous AI app, which was developed by the organization called Openaai, made for terrifyingly precise answers for headlines and demonstrated its viability in the field of digital assets.
It also produced some sharp opinions. The best AI personalities in the world such as Elon Musk, Steve Wozniak and Andrew Yang have reportedly signed an open letter in which they try to stop the development of AI systems.
It is expected that these systems in question are more powerful than GPT-4, the current version of the generative tool. But not everyone supports such a step. This did not fit well with Brian Armstrong, CEO of Coinbase, who said that it was a "bad idea" to continue with such a step.
The CEO from Coinbase mixes in
"As with many technologies, there are dangers, but we should continue to progress, because the good thing predominates the bad. The marketplace of ideas leads to better results than central planning. Never allow fear that fear is progressing, and be careful when someone is trying to get control of central authority."
The comment was an answer to the letter, the signatories also include Ripple co-founder Chris Larsen and other remarkable names such as the Turing award winner Yoshua Bengio, Stuart Russell, director of the Center for Intelligent Systems, Emad Mostaque, CEO from Stability AI, signatures with more than 1,100. Many in the industry have defended such a passion, citing considerable risks for society and humanity.
While others speculated about the motif of all well -known signatories. The former product manager of Mastercard for NFTS, Satvik Sethi, also tweeted Lines.
"It is also quite ironic that many of the popular signatories have a deeply personal interest in the room and probably only try to slow down their colleagues so that they can move forward.
Italy blocks Chatgpt
Chatgpt from Openaai quickly impressed, but many people pointed out to his dark side. Italy was the first to initiate an investigation against the artificial chat bot.
The country's data protection authority announced that it temporarily blocked Chatgpt due to alleged violations of data protection regulations, and also ordered the immediate restriction of data processing for Italian users by Openaai.
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