-
West Indies 'tick boxes' in shortened T20 against South Africa
-
Chelsea have something 'special' says Rosenior
-
De Zerbi 'ready to go to war' to solve Marseille troubles
-
Hornets hold off Wemby's Spurs for sixth NBA win in a row
-
Moyes blasts killjoy booking after Everton's late leveller
-
Ex-prince Andrew again caught up in Epstein scandal
-
Bayern held at Hamburg to open door for Dortmund
-
Atletico stumble to draw at Levante, Villarreal held
-
Chelsea stage impressive fightback to beat West Ham
-
Arsenal stretch Premier League lead, Chelsea fightback breaks Hammers' hearts
-
Napoli edge Fiorentina as injury crisis deepens
-
How Lego got swept up in US-Mexico trade frictions
-
UK rights campaigner Tatchell arrested at pro-Palestinian protest
-
Iran says progress made towards US talks despite attack jitters
-
'Empowering': Ireland's first female sumo wrestler blazes a trail
-
US judge denies Minnesota bid to suspend immigration sweeps
-
Ukraine hit by mass power outages after 'technical malfunction'
-
AC Milan prolong France 'keeper Maignan deal by five years
-
Arteta hails Arsenal's statement rout of Leeds
-
Marseille buckle as Paris FC battle back for draw
-
Protesters demand 'justice' one month after Swiss bar fire
-
Philadelphia's Paul George gets 25-game NBA drugs ban
-
La Rochelle suffer defeat after shock Atonio retirement
-
'It wasn't working': Canada province ends drug decriminalization
-
Kishan, Arshdeep star as India down New Zealand in T20 finale
-
Moreno bags brace but Villarreal held at Osasuna
-
Kramaric keeps in-form Hoffenheim rolling in Bundesliga
-
'Skimo': Adrenalin-packed sprint to make Olympic debut
-
Venezuela's 'Helicoide' prison synonymous with torture of dissenters
-
Arsenal thrash Leeds to stretch Premier League advantage
-
Russia's Valieva returns to ice after doping ban
-
Snow storm barrels into southern US as blast of icy weather widens
-
Ukraine sees mass power outages from 'technical malfunction'
-
Gaza civil defence says Israeli strikes kill 32
-
Kirsty Coventry set to give clues to her Olympic vision in Milan
-
I'm no angel, Italy's PM says amid church fresco row
-
Thousands join Danish war vets' silent march after Trump 'insult'
-
Gaza civil defence says Israeli strikes kill 28
-
Pakistan spin out Australia in second T20I to take series
-
Melbourne champion Rybakina never doubted return to Wimbledon form
-
Luis Enrique welcomes Ligue 1 challenge from Lens
-
Long truck lines at Colombia-Ecuador border as tariffs loom
-
Ex-prince Andrew dogged again by Epstein scandal
-
Separatist attacks in Pakistan kill 21, dozens of militants dead
-
'Malfunction' cuts power in Ukraine. Here's what we know
-
Arbeloa backs five Real Madrid stars he 'always' wants playing
-
Sabalenka 'really upset' at blowing chances in Melbourne final loss
-
Britain, Japan agree to deepen defence and security cooperation
-
Rybakina keeps her cool to beat Sabalenka in tense Melbourne final
-
France tightens infant formula rules after toxin scare
OpenAI releases ChatGPT-5 as AI race accelerates
OpenAI on Thursday released a keenly awaited new generation of its hallmark ChatGPT, touting "significant" advancements in artificial intelligence capabilities, as a global race over the technology accelerates.
ChatGPT-5 is rolling out free to all users of the AI tool, which is used by nearly 700 million people weekly, OpenAI said in a briefing with journalists.
Co-founder and chief executive Sam Altman touted this latest iteration as "clearly a model that is generally intelligent."
"It is a significant step toward models that are really capable," he said.
Altman cautioned that there is still work to be done to achieve the kind of artificial general intelligence (AGI) that thinks the way people do.
"This is not a model that continuously learns as it is deployed from new things it finds, which is something that, to me, feels like it should be part of an AGI," Altman said.
"But the level of capability here is a huge improvement."
GPT-5 is particularly adept when it comes to AI acting as an "agent" independently tending to computer tasks, according to Michelle Pokrass of the development team.
"GPT-3 felt to me like talking to a high school student -- ask a question, maybe you get a right answer, maybe you'll get something crazy," Altman said.
"GPT-4 felt like you're talking to a college student; GPT five is the first time that it really feels like talking to a PhD-level expert in any topic."
- Vibe coding -
Altman said he expects the ability to create software programs on demand -- so-called "vibe-coding" -- to be a "defining part of the new ChatGPT-5 era."
As an example, OpenAI executives demonstrated the bot being asked to create an app for learning the French language.
With fierce competition around the world over the technology, Altman said ChatGPT-5 led the pack in coding, writing, health care and much more.
Rivals including Google and Microsoft have been pumping billions of dollars into developing AI systems.
Altman said there were "orders of magnitude more gains" to come on the path toward AGI.
"Obviously...you have to invest in compute (power) at an eye watering rate to get that, but we intend to keep doing it."
ChatGPT-5 was also trained to be trustworthy and stick to providing answers as helpful as possible without aiding a seemingly harmful mission, according to OpenAI safety research lead Alex Beutel.
"We built evaluations to measure the prevalence of deception and trained the model to be honest," Beutel said.
ChatGPT-5 is trained to generate "safe completions," sticking to high-level information that can't be used to cause harm, according to Beutel.
The debut comes a day after OpenAI said it was allowing the US government to use a version of ChatGPT designed for businesses for a year for just $1.
Federal workers in the executive branch will have access to ChatGPT Enterprise essentially free in a partnership with the US General Services Administration, according to the artificial intelligence sector star.
The company this week also released two new AI models that can be downloaded for free and altered by users, to challenge similar offerings by US and Chinese competition.
The release of gpt-oss-120b and gpt-oss-20b "open-weight language models" comes as the ChatGPT-maker is under pressure to share inner workings of its software in the spirit of its origin as a nonprofit.
J.Horn--BTB