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Microsoft has unveiled an advanced version of its search engine Bing – complete with ChatGPT-like technology.
Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella sat down with "CBS Mornings" co-host Tony Dokoupil ahead of an announcement the company plans to make Tuesday about artificial intelligence. He told Dokoupil he believes that despite fears of potential job disruption, AI will eventually lead to worker satisfaction.
The maker of ChatGPT has released a new tool that can help teachers detect if text was produced by a student or artificial intelligence. Kyle Wiggers, a senior reporter at TechCrunch, joined CBS News to discuss the new tool.
AI Impact on Education and Job Market
Judge Juan Manuel Padilla did not specify how much he relied on the bot to write his opinion. After investing billions in AI-chatbot, the tech company is already using it to help improve consumers' work patterns. Chatbots and artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT can quickly create written content and perform tasks like writing essays or legal documents. But could they take your job?
CBS MoneyWatch reporter Megan Cerullo joined Anne-Marie Green and Errol Barnett to discuss the pros and cons of this rapidly developing technology.
Combatting Misinformation
With the proliferation of artificial intelligence software used to produce fake videos and photographs, Adobe and Microsoft have teamed up to develop new tools for verifying images on the web.
Correspondent David Pogue looks at how Content Credentials can help retain trust in journalism, and protect democracy from propaganda.
The Rise of AI Writing
OpenAI's artificial intelligence writing program can, with a few prompts, compose poetry, prose, song lyrics, essays, even news articles. And that has ethicists and educators worried about the program's ease at replacing human ideas with chatbot-generated words.
AI in Art and Design
Cutting-edge AI can now create millions of artworks almost instantaneously. Artists say the technology is stealing their work. DALL-E is one of several artificial intelligence software programs that can turn anything you type, no matter how absurd, into art, in any style you like, drawing from hundreds of millions of images in its database. And with this technological advance come some serious downsides.
AI in Academia and Cheating
Artificial intelligence software called ChatGPT is being used by students to cheat on tests and write essays. Nikki Battiste takes a look at how it works. Edward Tian said more than 20,000 users — many of them teachers — have already tested his app.
AI in Events and Conferences
Modev founder Pete Erickson joined CBS News' Anne-Marie Green and Vladimir Duthiers with a look at the latest AI technology and a preview of the CES 2023 conference kicking off in Las Vegas.
Geopolitical Implications of AI
Eurasia Group's president and founder Ian Bremmer joins "CBS Mornings" to discuss their annual list of top geopolitical risks the world faces this year, including a rogue Russia, possible mistakes made by Xi Jinping, and A.I. used as a weapon of mass disruption.
Other News
The California Highway Patrol is investigating what caused a Tesla to fly off a cliff on the Pacific Coast Highway and nearly land in the ocean. Remarkably, all four people survived the 250-foot drop. The Israeli strike came hours after Hamas claimed it fired a barrage of rockets from Gaza toward central Israel for the first time in months.
Memorial Day and National Events
President Joe Biden laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier and is delivering his annual Memorial Day address. Powerful storms left a wide trail of destruction in Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, and Kentucky. But there were also remarkable stories of survival. Several House Democrats are wondering why a plaque to honor police officers who saved the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, wasn't installed by the deadline required by law. Trump is being tried in New York state court, where judges have broad authority to determine when sentences are handed down after convictions, says a former prosecutor.
In Conclusion
"Sunday Morning" remembers some of the notable figures who recently left us, including stunt woman Susan Blacklinie, who played the first victim of the shark in Steven Spielberg's "Jaws." She was a gun-toting goddess, who made her name in blaxploitation films like "Coffy" and "Foxy Brown." But the action star was more than just proficient at taking down drug dealers; she also beat cancer.