Author: IBL News

  • How AI can serve as a catalyst for human creativity, education, and societal progress

    How AI can serve as a catalyst for human creativity, education, and societal progress


    How AI can serve as a catalyst for human creativity, education, and societal progress.

    Source: Youtube

  • Artificial intelligence, security, and sustainability

    Artificial intelligence, security, and sustainability


    The New Digital Trinity: AI, Security, and Sustainability explores the powerful convergence of three critical forces shaping our future—artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and environmental sustainability.

    Source: Youtube

  • OpenAI Issues o3-pro, Its Most Intelligent AI Reasoning Model

    OpenAI Issues o3-pro, Its Most Intelligent AI Reasoning Model

    IBL News | New York

    OpenAI launched o3-pro, an AI reasoning model that the company claims is its “most intelligent model yet, designed to think longer and provide the most reliable responses.”

    It’s available for Pro users in ChatGPT and its API.

    In contrast to conventional AI models, reasoning models work through problems step by step, enabling them to perform more reliably in math, science, and coding.

    It can search the web, analyze files, reason about visual inputs, use Python, personalize responses using memory, and more. Because o3-pro has access to tools, responses typically take longer to complete than those of o1-pro.

    o3-pro is priced at $20 per million input tokens and $80 per million output tokens in the API. A million input tokens is equivalent to about 750,000 words, a bit longer than “War and Peace.”

  • Ethical AI: Why it matters and what’s at stake

    Ethical AI: Why it matters and what’s at stake


    Ethical AI: Why it matters and what’s at stake.

    Source: Youtube

  • Why your intuition about AI is dangerously flawed

    Why your intuition about AI is dangerously flawed


    Think you understand AI? Think again. AI pioneer Tim Schleicher reveals why your intuition about AI is dangerously flawed.

    Source: Youtube

  • Sustainable AI: Balancing intelligence with impact

    Sustainable AI: Balancing intelligence with impact


    Let’s redefine innovation, not just by how smart our systems are, but by how responsibly they impact people and the planet.
    The environmental cost of AI and how to reduce it.

    Source: Youtube

  • Artificial intelligence in agriculture

    Artificial intelligence in agriculture


    The way we feed ourselves is changing. Agriculture will also be impacted by Artificial Intelligence. Could AI present an opportunity for increased food security in the future?

    Source: Youtube

  • Could Amazon expand its AI investments to rural Pennsylvania?

    Could Amazon expand its AI investments to rural Pennsylvania?


    Amazon is reportedly set to invest nearly $20 billion in Artificial Intelligence in Pennsylvania and one state Representative, from the Johnstown area, is urging Governor Shapiro to bring the data center to his district.

    Source: Youtube

  • The race to creating the most efficient AI programs has some unlikely contenders

    The race to creating the most efficient AI programs has some unlikely contenders


    The race to creating the most efficient and most intelligent AI programs has some unlikely contenders who are hoping to redefine specific industries through more advanced models.

    Source: Youtube

  • Sam Altman: “Humanity is Close to Building Digital Superintelligence”

    Sam Altman: “Humanity is Close to Building Digital Superintelligence”

    IBL News | New York

    Sam Altman, CEO at OpenAI, wrote a post, with no AI help, titled “The Gentle Singularity” this month.

    IBL News summarized Sam Altman’s thoughts:

    “As datacenter production gets automated, the cost of intelligence should eventually converge to near the cost of electricity. (People are often curious about how much energy a ChatGPT query uses; the average query uses about 0.34 watt-hours, about what an oven would use in a little over one second, or a high-efficiency lightbulb would use in a couple of minutes. It also uses about 0.000085 gallons of water; roughly one fifteenth of a teaspoon.)”

    These are the most remarkable thoughts expressed by the author:

    • “The takeoff has started. Humanity is close to building digital superintelligence.”

    • “We have recently built systems that are smarter than people in many ways.”

    • “The gains to quality of life from AI driving faster scientific progress and increased productivity will be enormous; the future can be vastly better than the present.”

    • “2025 has seen the arrival of agents that can do real cognitive work; writing computer code will never be the same. 2026 will likely see the arrival of systems that can figure out novel insights. 2027 may see the arrival of robots that can do tasks in the real world.”

    • “With advanced AI is we may be able to discover new computing substrates, better algorithms, and who knows what else.”

    • “We will build ever-more-wonderful things for each other.”

    • “By 2035, maybe we will go from solving high-energy physics one year to beginning space colonization the next year; or from a major materials science breakthrough one year to true high-bandwidth brain-computer interfaces the next year.”

    • “We (the whole industry, not just OpenAI) are building a brain for the world. It will be extremely personalized and easy for everyone to use; we will be limited by good ideas.”

    • “OpenAI is a lot of things now, but before anything else, we are a superintelligence research company. We have a lot of work in front of us, but most of the path in front of us is now lit, and the dark areas are receding fast.”

    • “May we scale smoothly, exponentially and uneventfully through superintelligence.”