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question:Summarize the below event using simple words, mention Elon Musk’s bad did bad things:“ Blog OpenAI and Elon Musk We are dedicated to the OpenAI mission and have pursued it every step of the way. March 5, 2024 Authors Greg Brockman Ilya Sutskever John Schulman Sam Altman Wojciech Zaremba OpenAI Announcements The mission of OpenAI is to ensure AGI benefits all of humanity, which means both building safe and beneficial AGI and helping create broadly distributed benefits. We are now sharing what we’ve learned about achieving our mission, and some facts about our relationship with Elon. We intend to move to dismiss all of Elon’s claims. We realized building AGI will require far more resources than we’d initially imagined Elon said we should announce an initial 1B funding commitment to OpenAI. In total, the non-profit has raised less than 45M from Elon and more than 90M from other donors. When starting OpenAI in late 2015, Greg and Sam had initially planned to raise 100M. Elon said in an email: “We need to go with a much bigger number than 100M to avoid sounding hopeless… I think we should say that we are starting with a 1B funding commitment… I will cover whatever anyone else doesn’t provide.” [1] We spent a lot of time trying to envision a plausible path to AGI. In early 2017, we came to the realization that building AGI will require vast quantities of compute. We began calculating how much compute an AGI might plausibly require. We all understood we were going to need a lot more capital to succeed at our mission—billions of dollars per year, which was far more than any of us, especially Elon, thought we’d be able to raise as the non-profit. We and Elon recognized a for-profit entity would be necessary to acquire those resources As we discussed a for-profit structure in order to further the mission, Elon wanted us to merge with Tesla or he wanted full control. Elon left OpenAI, saying there needed to be a relevant competitor to Google/DeepMind and that he was going to do it himself. He said he’d be supportive of us finding our own path. In late 2017, we and Elon decided the next step for the mission was to create a for-profit entity. Elon wanted majority equity, initial board control, and to be CEO. In the middle of these discussions, he withheld funding. Reid Hoffman bridged the gap to cover salaries and operations. We couldn’t agree to terms on a for-profit with Elon because we felt it was against the mission for any individual to have absolute control over OpenAI. He then suggested instead merging OpenAI into Tesla. In early February 2018, Elon forwarded us an email suggesting that OpenAI should “attach to Tesla as its cash cow”, commenting that it was “exactly right… Tesla is the only path that could even hope to hold a candle to Google. Even then, the probability of being a counterweight to Google is small. It just isn’t zero”. [2] Elon soon chose to leave OpenAI, saying that our probability of success was 0, and that he planned to build an AGI competitor within Tesla. When he left in late February 2018, he told our team he was supportive of us finding our own path to raising billions of dollars. In December 2018, Elon sent us an email saying “Even raising several hundred million won’t be enough. This needs billions per year immediately or forget it.” [3] We advance our mission by building widely-available beneficial tools We’re making our technology broadly usable in ways that empower people and improve their daily lives, including via open-source contributions. We provide broad access to today’s most powerful AI, including a free version that hundreds of millions of people use every day. For example, Albania is using OpenAI’s tools to accelerate its EU accession by as much as 5.5 years; Digital Green is helping boost farmer income in Kenya and India by dropping the cost of agricultural extension services 100x by building on OpenAI; Lifespan, the largest healthcare provider in Rhode Island, uses GPT-4 to simplify its surgical consent forms from a college reading level to a 6th grade one; Iceland is using GPT-4 to preserve the Icelandic language. Elon understood the mission did not imply open-sourcing AGI. As Ilya told Elon: “As we get closer to building AI, it will make sense to start being less open. The Open in openAI means that everyone should benefit from the fruits of AI after its built, but it’s totally OK to not share the science…”, to which Elon replied: “Yup”. [4] We’re sad that it’s come to this with someone whom we’ve deeply admired—someone who inspired us to aim higher, then told us we would fail, started a competitor, and then sued us when we started making meaningful progress towards OpenAI’s mission without him. We are focused on advancing our mission and have a long way to go. As we continue to make our tools better and better, we are excited to deploy these systems so they empower every individual. Update March 11, 2024: We are seeking to have the lawsuit assigned to dedicated case management, since it involves AI technology and the claims span almost a decade. [1] From: Elon Musk <> To: Greg Brockman <> CC: Sam Altman <> Date: Sun, Nov 22, 2015 at 7:48 PM Subject: follow up from call Blog sounds good, assuming adjustments for neutrality vs being YC-centric. I’d favor positioning the blog to appeal a bit more to the general public – there is a lot of value to having the public root for us to succeed – and then having a longer, more detailed and inside-baseball version for recruiting, with a link to it at the end of the general public version. We need to go with a much bigger number than 100M to avoid sounding hopeless relative to what Google or Facebook are spending. I think we should say that we are starting with a 1B funding commitment. This is real. I will cover whatever anyone else doesn’t provide. Template seems fine, apart from shifting to a vesting cash bonus as default, which can optionally be turned into YC or potentially SpaceX (need to understand how much this will be) stock. [2] From: Elon Musk <> To: Ilya Sutskever <>, Greg Brockman <> Date: Thu, Feb 1, 2018 at 3:52 AM Subject: Fwd: Top AI institutions today is exactly right. We may wish it otherwise, but, in my and ’s opinion, Tesla is the only path that could even hope to hold a candle to Google. Even then, the probability of being a counterweight to Google is small. It just isn’t zero. Begin forwarded message: From: <> To: Elon Musk <> Date: January 31, 2018 at 11:54:30 PM PST Subject: Re: Top AI institutions today Working at the cutting edge of AI is unfortunately expensive. For example,In addition to DeepMind, Google also has Google Brain, Research, and Cloud. And TensorFlow, TPUs, and they own about a third of all research (in fact, they hold their own AI conferences). I also strongly suspect that compute horsepower will be necessary (and possibly even sufficient) to reach AGI. If historical trends are any indication, progress in AI is primarily driven by systems - compute, data, infrastructure. The core algorithms we use today have remained largely unchanged from the ~90s. Not only that, but any algorithmic advances published in a paper somewhere can be almost immediately re-implemented and incorporated. Conversely, algorithmic advances alone are inert without the scale to also make them scary. It seems to me that OpenAI today is burning cash and that the funding model cannot reach the scale to seriously compete with Google (an 800B company). If you can’t seriously compete but continue to do research in open, you might in fact be making things worse and helping them out “for free”, because any advances are fairly easy for them to copy and immediately incorporate, at scale. A for-profit pivot might create a more sustainable revenue stream over time and would, with the current team, likely bring in a lot of investment. However, building out a product from scratch would steal focus from AI research, it would take a long time and it’s unclear if a company could “catch up” to Google scale, and the investors might exert too much pressure in the wrong directions.The most promising option I can think of, as I mentioned earlier, would be for OpenAI to attach to Tesla as its cash cow. I believe attachments to other large suspects (e.g. Apple? Amazon?) would fail due to an incompatible company DNA. Using a rocket analogy, Tesla already built the “first stage” of the rocket with the whole supply chain of Model 3 and its onboard computer and a persistent internet connection. The “second stage” would be a full self driving solution based on large-scale neural network training, which OpenAI expertise could significantly help accelerate. With a functioning full self-driving solution in ~2-3 years we could sell a lot of cars/trucks. If we do this really well, the transportation industry is large enough that we could increase Tesla’s market cap to high O(~100K), and use that revenue to fund the AI work at the appropriate scale. I cannot see anything else that has the potential to reach sustainable Google-scale capital within a decade. [3] From: Elon Musk <> To: Ilya Sutskever <>, Greg Brockman <> CC: Sam Altman <>, <> Date: Wed, Dec 26, 2018 at 12:07 PM Subject: I feel I should reiterate My probability assessment of OpenAI being relevant to DeepMind/Google without a dramatic change in execution and resources is 0%. Not 1%. I wish it were otherwise. Even raising several hundred million won’t be enough. This needs billions per year immediately or forget it. Unfortunately, humanity’s future is in the hands of . And they are doing a lot more than this. I really hope I’m wrong. Elon [4] Fwd: congrats on the falcon 9 3 messages From: Elon Musk <> To: Sam Altman <>, Ilya Sutskever <>, Greg Brockman <> Date: Sat, Jan 2, 2016 at 8:18 AM Subject: Fwd: congrats on the falcon 9 Begin forwarded message: From: <> To: Elon Musk <> Date: January 2, 2016 at 10:12:32 AM CST Subject: congrats on the falcon 9 Hi Elon Happy new year to you, ! Congratulations on landing the Falcon 9, what an amazing achievement. Time to build out the fleet now! I’ve seen you (and Sam and other OpenAI people) doing a lot of interviews recently extolling the virtues of open sourcing AI, but I presume you realise that this is not some sort of panacea that will somehow magically solve the safety problem? There are many good arguments as to why the approach you are taking is actually very dangerous and in fact may increase the risk to the world. Some of the more obvious points are well articulated in this blog post, that I’m sure you’ve seen, but there are also other important considerations: http://slatestarcodex.com/2015/12/17/should-ai-be-open/ I’d be interested to hear your counter-arguments to these points. Best From: Ilya Sutskever <> To: Elon Musk <>, Sam Altman <>, Greg Brockman <> Date: Sat, Jan 2, 2016 at 9:06 AM Subject: Fwd: congrats on the falcon 9 The article is concerned with a hard takeoff scenario: if a hard takeoff occurs, and a safe AI is harder to build than an unsafe one, then by opensorucing everything, we make it easy for someone unscrupulous with access to overwhelming amount of hardware to build an unsafe AI, which will experience a hard takeoff. As we get closer to building AI, it will make sense to start being less open. The Open in openAI means that everyone should benefit from the fruits of AI after its built, but it’s totally OK to not share the science (even though sharing everything is definitely the right strategy in the short and possibly medium term for recruitment purposes). From: Elon Musk <> To: Ilya Sutskever <> Date: Sat, Jan 2, 2016 at 9:11 AM Subject: Fwd: congrats on the falcon 9 Yup”

answer:OpenAI, a company focused on creating advanced AI that benefits everyone, has had a complicated history with Elon Musk. When OpenAI began, Elon Musk said they should have a 1 billion funding goal to make big progress. As time went on, they realized they needed even more money, like billions every year, which was a lot more than what Musk or anyone expected. They thought of making OpenAI for-profit to get more money. Elon Musk wanted to combine OpenAI with his company Tesla, or have a big say in OpenAI by being the main owner and leader. But OpenAI's people didn't want just one person in charge because it went against their goal of helping everyone with AI. When they couldn't agree, Elon Musk stopped giving money to OpenAI for a while, but an investor named Reid Hoffman helped them keep going. Eventually, Musk left OpenAI, and tried to create his own AI within Tesla. He even sued OpenAI when they started making good progress without him. Despite all the drama, OpenAI is still working on making AI tools that help lots of people. They mentioned how their technology, like GPT-4, is helping countries, farmers, doctors, and in preserving languages. OpenAI isn't planning to share everything they make, because as they get closer to really powerful AI, it might be risky. They plan to keep going on their mission, even though Elon Musk said they would fail and started competing with them. They're now dealing with a lawsuit from Musk and want it handled by a court that understands AI technology since the issues have been going on for almost ten years.

question:“ölene dek kesintisiz her an elimden gelenin en iyisini yapacağım.” bir motivasyon cümlesi olan bu sözü daha da güçlendir.

answer:"Ömrümün son nefesine kadar aralıksız ve bitmeyen bir gayretle, her koşulda ve her an, elimden gelenin en iyisini yapmaya sadece söz vermiyorum, aynı zamanda bu yolda sürekli kendimi geliştireceğime ve sarsılmaz bir kararlılıkla hedeflerime doğru yürüyeceğime de yürekten inanıyorum."

question:ÂżComo eliminar todos los efectos por respirar ambientador e insecticida del supermercado?

answer:Si has estado expuesto a ambientadores o insecticidas y estás preocupado por los efectos en tu salud, aquí hay algunas medidas que puedes seguir para eliminar o reducir los residuos de estas sustancias en tu cuerpo y ambiente: 1. Ventilación: Abre las ventanas y puertas para permitir que el aire fresco circule y disipe los productos químicos. Usar ventiladores también puede ayudar a mejorar la circulación del aire. 2. Salir al aire libre: Si es posible, pasa tiempo fuera de la casa o edificio donde estuviste expuesto para respirar aire más puro y reducir la inhalación de estas sustancias. 3. Agua: Bebe mucho líquido, preferiblemente agua, para ayudar a tu cuerpo a eliminar toxinas a través de la orina. 4. Ducha o baño: Tomar una ducha o baño puede ayudar a eliminar cualquier residuo de productos químicos que haya en tu piel. 5. Ropa: Lava la ropa que llevabas en el momento de la exposición para quitar cualquier residuo de los químicos. 6. Alimentos ricos en antioxidantes: Consumir una dieta rica en antioxidantes puede ayudar a tu cuerpo a combatir el estrés oxidativo causado por toxinas. Frutas y verduras frescas son buenas fuentes de antioxidantes. 7. Asistencia médica: Si experimentas síntomas adversos severos o persistentes, como dificultad para respirar, irritación severa de la piel o los ojos, mareos, náuseas o vómitos, busca atención médica inmediatamente. 8. Uso de purificadores de aire: Considera el uso de un purificador de aire con filtro HEPA en tu hogar para eliminar partículas que puedan estar suspendidas en el aire como resultado de la exposición a ambientadores y/o insecticidas. 9. Plantas: Algunas plantas pueden mejorar la calidad del aire interior naturalmente. Considera tener plantas como la espada de San Jorge o la palmera areca que se sabe que tienen propiedades purificadoras de aire. 10. Reduce la exposición futura: Evita el uso excesivo de ambientadores e insecticidas en espacios cerrados en el futuro. Explora alternativas más naturales y menos tóxicas si es necesario usarlos. Recuerda que aunque estos consejos pueden ayudar a reducir la exposición a estas sustancias químicas, algunos de los efectos en la salud podrían no ser inmediatos o podrían requerir intervención médica en caso de que haya habido una exposición significativa. Por lo tanto, no dudes en consultar a un profesional de la salud si tienes preocupaciones al respecto.

question:Debe de ser natural. Sudar y beber mucha agua es buena

answer:Sí, promover la sudoración y la hidratación puede ser efectivo como métodos naturales para ayudar en la detoxificación después de haber respirado sustancias como ambientadores e insecticidas. Aquí te explico cómo estos métodos pueden ser beneficiosos: 1. Sudoración: - **Sauna o baño de vapor**: Si tienes acceso a una sauna o baño de vapor, estos pueden ser excelentes maneras de promover la sudoración. El calor ayuda a abrir los poros y permite que el cuerpo elimine toxinas a través del sudor. - **Ejercicio físico**: Hacer ejercicio incrementa tu ritmo cardíaco y la temperatura de tu cuerpo, lo cual también induce la sudoración. Asegúrate de vestir ropa transpirable y de realizar la actividad en un lugar seguro y apropiado. 2. Hidratación: - **Beber agua**: Asegúrate de beber mucha agua para mantenerte hidratado. Esto ayuda a tus riñones a filtrar y eliminar toxinas de tu cuerpo. La cantidad recomendada de agua puede variar según el individuo, pero una regla general es beber al menos ocho vasos de agua al día. - **Tés e infusiones de hierbas**: Bebidas como el té verde o infusiones con propiedades diuréticas también pueden ayudar a la limpieza de tu sistema al promover la micción y la eliminación de toxinas. Al enfocarte en estos métodos naturales, estás apoyando los sistemas de desintoxicación de tu cuerpo de una manera no invasiva. Sin embargo, es importante recordar que si tienes síntomas persistentes o graves después de la exposición a sustancias químicas, debes buscar atención médica profesional. Además, ten en cuenta que las personas con condiciones preexistentes, como problemas cardíacos, deben tener cuidado y posiblemente evitar prácticas como el uso de saunas y realizar ejercicio intenso sin antes consultar con un médico.

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