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ChatGPT maker OpenAI inked a new deal with the US government. Here's what their plans for AI in government could mean for you.
"Our goal is to unlock AI solutions that enhance the capabilities of government workers, help them cut down on the red tape ...
OpenAI secured a $200 million contract with the US Department of Defense to develop AI tools. The contract is OpenAI's first official defense deal, following prior government collaborations. Analysts ...
OpenAI's $200M Pentagon deal marks a major pivot toward government and military AI, raising ethical questions and reshaping ...
OpenAI proposes US authorities ban DeepSeek from government and military offices OpenAI had not taken an aggressive stance ...
OpenAI has reportedly introduced new policies to restrict employee access to sensitive projects and discussions, similar to how it handled the development of the o1 model – according to a TechCrunch ...
The National Academy for AI Instruction will make artificial intelligence training accessible to educators across the country ...
OpenAI, alongside the likes of Anthropic and Meta, has partnered multiple times with the US government to develop new AI tools specialised for government workloads.
OpenAI wants to create government incentives (that would benefit them) to build in the US. Plus, OpenAI wants to digitize all the government information that is currently still in analog form.
OpenAI has announced ChatGPT Gov, a new version of their premiere AI models that the company hopes will be used securely by U.S. government agencies.
According to OpenAI, many government agencies already have been leveraging ChatGPT for their everyday workflows; to date, more than 90,000 users across more than 3,500 US federal, state, and local ...
OpenAI is calling on the U.S. government to adopt a copyright policy that allows training of AI models on IP-protected data.