OpenAI won’t make “Japanese anime sex bots” but Sam Altman says others definitely will — AI relationships are getting weird

The point under debate is particularly intriguing to me since it spawned one of the most unusual statements I’ve encountered during my reporting. Following Altman’s assertion that only a minimal fraction, nearly 1%, of ChatGPT users may have an unbalanced connection with the tool, he touched upon a boundary that OpenAI will never transgress.

Preview: Capcom’s Onimusha: Way of the Sword Seems Steeled for Success

It might appear unusual to discuss what a game doesn’t embody, but it’s clear that the gameplay style from FromSoftware has grown quite extensive – even overwhelming at times. Despite our appreciation for this Japanese studio, not every game should follow the path of Elden Ring or Bloodborne, don’t you agree?

“I’m worried about China” — OpenAI’s Sam Altman doesn’t believe export controls will slow foreign progress in AI supremacy war

As an enthusiast, I find myself marveling at the centerstage in this AI revolution across the USA, companies such as OpenAI (the geniuses behind ChatGPT), Meta, Alphabet (Google’s parent company), Microsoft, and NVIDIA have been trailblazers, with NVIDIA even breaking ground by surpassing a staggering $4 trillion valuation. On the other side of the globe in China, it’s companies like Baidu, Alibaba, Tencent, and ByteDance that are making significant strides to close the gap, eagerly joining the global AI race.

Preview: Here’s Why Resident Evil Requiem’s Tension Is Off the Charts

At the demo preceding Gamescom, I had an exhilarating hands-on experience with a PS5 Pro, testing approximately 20 minutes of the upcoming survival horror game. Surprisingly, I wasn’t just given one chance to explore this terrifying world – I played it twice! The first time was from a first-person perspective, and the second time, I switched to third-person view. Each mode had its unique perks, which I’ll discuss further.