ChatGPT & Generative AI in Enterprise Environments

ChatGPT-4

By Phil Lewis

Generative AI describes a new class of foundational models for Natural Language Processing (NLP), which includes OpenAI’s ChatGPT and DALL-E, Google’s BARD chatbot, Baidu’s ERNIE Artificial Intelligence (AI) model, and others. These models enable users to tap into a variety of data sources, including the Internet, to generate text and code, formulate predictions and summaries, perform translations, analyse images and more.

Infor is cautiously optimistic about the potential for OpenAI’s ChatGPT and other Generative AI models to automate business processes and improve productivity in enterprise environments.

ChatGPT-4
ChatGPT-4

Infor envisions that ChatGPT and other Generative AI models could be used for a variety of enterprise use cases such as – but not limited to – writing e-mails, reports, product documentation and web content, creating job descriptions and requisitions, performing product and vendor comparisons, and assembling photos, music tracks and videos for marketing campaigns, for example.

read also Almentor Raises $10M Pre-series C Round To Scale Online Video Learning Business

At the same time, there are a number of challenges to be addressed before ChatGPT and other Generative AI models can gain widespread adoption in enterprise environments. For example, human control and moderation will be required for some time to boost the accuracy and consistency of the generated content, help reduce socio-political biases, and ensure that a company’s competitive edge is not compromised.

Further, the generation and exchange of business-specific content must adhere to strict legal and data privacy requirements – for example, when companies perform a Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) to ensure compliance with the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). 

Open AI models also are exposed as APIs, which customers can consume using their own credentials. The openness of Infor’s technology platform, Infor OS, enables customers to register these APIs in Infor’s API gateway and build custom extensions on top of them from Infor cloud. For example, you can easily build a custom skill to chat with Open AI from Infor’s own chatbot. Or you can look up publicly available information on products and vendors from an in-context widget in our Infor portal. 

We strongly advise that any such interactions be subjected to moderation filters provided by Open AI. It also is important to note that, at this moment, the knowledge of this model is based on data up to 2021. 

There is no doubt that this is an inflection point in AI and computing. While we expect our customers to adopt this powerful technology rapidly, we also hope they are aware of the potential risks, inaccuracy and privacy concerns behind consuming this powerful technology. Naturally, it’s only a matter of time before the Generative AI space matures and addresses such concerns. 

read also Factor[e] Ventures Launches Delta40, A Startup Creation Studio In Africa

Infor is also investigating ways in which ChatGPT and other Generative AI models can complement our current NLP solutions and AI ensemble – delivered in conjunction with Amazon Web Services (AWS), our preferred infrastructure partner. These solutions include voice chat capabilities with our Infor Coleman digital assistant, machine learning (ML) models through our Coleman AI platform, and enterprise search and image recognition capabilities via AWS.

ChatGPT and other Generative AI models represent disruptive solutions that already are helping consumers refine the search process, automate the creation of content, and boost individual productivity.

With human control and moderation, these models also have the potential to transform enterprise environments – simplifying code and content generation, automating end-to-end business processes, and boosting employee productivity and satisfaction. 

By Phil Lewis, Senior Vice President of Solution Consulting, International, Infor

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

Media Outlets Accuse ChatGPT of Stealing Their Articles

ChatGPT software

Major news outlets have begun criticising OpenAI and its ChatGPT software, saying the lab is using their articles to train its artificial intelligence tool without paying them. “Anyone who wants to use the work of Wall Street Journal journalists to train artificial intelligence should be properly licensing the rights to do so from Dow Jones,” Jason Conti, general counsel for News Corp’s Dow Jones unit, said in a statement. “Dow Jones does not have such a deal with OpenAI.”

Conti added: “We take the misuse of our journalists’ work seriously, and are reviewing this situation.”

ChatGPT software

We take the misuse of our journalists’ work seriously, and are reviewing this situation.
The news groups’ concerns arose when the computational journalist Francesco Marconi posted a tweet this week saying their work was being used to train ChatGPT. Marconi said he asked the chatbot for a list of news sources it was trained on and received a response naming 20 outlets.

Read also : Nigerian E-Health Startup Famasi Raises Funding

OpenAI didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

News organisations aren’t the first companies to raise questions about whether their content is being used without authorisation by AI systems. In November, GitHub, Microsoft and OpenAI were sued in a case that alleged a tool called GitHub Copilot was essentially plagiarising human developers in violation of their licences.

In January, a group of artists sued AI generators Stability AI, Midjourney and DeviantArt, claiming those companies downloaded and used billions of copyrighted images without compensating or obtaining the consent of the artists.

Like the Journal, CNN believes that using its articles to train ChatGPT violates the network’s terms of service, according to a person with knowledge of the matter. The network, owned by Warner Bros Discovery, plans to reach out to OpenAI about being paid to license the content, said the person, who asked not to be identified discussing a legal matter.

Read also : Nigerian HR Startup Pade HCM Raises $500k In Pre-seed Funding To Build HR Processes For African Businesses

The use of AI has been controversial in the news industry. Some journalists worry the technology will take over their jobs. Others fear the spread of misinformation. In recent weeks, publications like CNET and Men’s Journal have been forced to correct AI-written articles that were riddled with errors.

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry

How Will ChatGPT Usher in The AI Revolution?

Have you heard of ChatGPT yet? It’s a thrilling, vexing, ontologically mesmerising new technology created by the research group OpenAI. It can solve all your problems and answer all your questions. Or at least it will try to. 

In essence, ChatGPT is a bot trained to generate human-like responses to user inputs. Through the wonders of machine learning, it’s acquired a remarkably expansive skillset. On request, it can produce basic software code, rudimentary financial analysis, amusing poems and songs, spot-on imitations, reflective essays on virtually any topic, natural-language summaries of technical papers or scientific concepts, chat-based customer service, informed predictions, personalised advice, and answers — for better or worse — to just about any question. Unusually for a chatbot, it can learn as it goes, and thus sustain engaging open-ended conversations. 

ChatGPT

It is, to borrow Arthur C Clarke’s old formulation, “indistinguishable from magic”. 

One problem is that ChatGPT sometimes offers answers that are precise, authoritative and utterly wrong.

Read also South African Medtech LIQID Medical Raises $1.6M To Develop New Ocular Implants

Almost, anyway. One problem, which its creators concede, is that ChatGPT sometimes offers answers that are precise, authoritative and utterly wrong. A request for an obituary of Mussolini that prominently mentions skateboarding yields a disquisition on the dictator’s interest in the sport that happens to be entirely fictitious. Another soliciting advice for the US Federal Reserve returns an essay that cites ostensibly legitimate sources, but that doctors the data to suit the bot’s purposes. Stack Overflow, a forum for coders, has temporarily banned responses from ChatGPT because its answers “have a high rate of being incorrect”. Students looking for a homework assistant should proceed with care. 

The bot also seems easily confused. Try posing a classic riddle: “In total, a bat and a ball cost $1.10. If the bat costs $1.00 more than the ball, how much does the ball cost?” Haplessly for a robot, ChatGPT responds with the instinctive but wrong answer of $0.10. (The correct solution is $0.05.) The Internet’s hivemind has been joyfully cataloging other examples of the bot’s faults and frailties. 

Read also How 3D Gamified Business Processes Will Change World

Remarkable achievement

Such criticism feels misplaced. The fact is, ChatGPT is a remarkable achievement. Not long ago, a conversational bot of such sophistication seemed hopelessly out of reach. As the technology improves — and, crucially, grows more accurate — it seems likely to be a boon for coders, researchers, academics, policymakers, journalists and more. (Presuming that it doesn’t put them all out of work.) Its effect on the knowledge economy could be profound. In previous eras, wars might’ve been fought for access to such a seemingly enchanted tool — and with good reason. 

Intriguingly, OpenAI plans to make the tool available as an application programming interface (or API), which will allow outside developers to integrate it into their websites or apps without needing to understand the underlying technology. That means companies could soon use ChatGPT to create virtual assistants, customer service bots or marketing tools. They could automate document review and other tedious tasks. Down the road, they might use it to generate new ideas and simplify decision making. In all likelihood, no one has thought of the best uses for it yet. 

ChatGPT: What is OpenAI’s chatbot and what is it used for?

In that respect and others, ChatGPT exemplifies a widening array of AI tools that may soon transform entire industries, from manufacturing to healthcare to finance. Investment has been surging in the field. Breakthroughs seem to proliferate by the day. Many industry experts express unbounded enthusiasm. By one analysis, AI will likely contribute a staggering US$15.7-trillion to the global economy by 2030. 

Read also Digital Payments: A Crucial Step in the Financial Inclusion Endgame

As yet, policymakers seem largely unaware of this revolution, let alone prepared for it. They should greet it in a spirit of optimism, while being attentive to its potential risks — to data security, privacy, employment and more. They might also ponder some rather more existential concerns. For better and worse, ChatGPT heralds a very different world in the making

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry