Skip to main content

AI is now being trained by AI to become a better AI

An OpenAI graphic for ChatGPT-4.
OpenAI

OpenAI has developed an AI assistant, dubbed CriticGPT, to help its crowd-sourced trainers further refine the GPT-4 model. It spots subtle coding errors that humans might otherwise miss.

After a large language model like GPT-4 is initially trained, it subsequently undergoes a continual process of refinement, known as Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF). Human trainers interact with the system and annotate the responses to various questions, as well as rate various responses against one another, so that the system learns to return the preferred response and increases the model’s response accuracy.

The problem is that as the system’s performance improves, it can outpace the level of expertise of its trainer, and the process of identifying mistakes and errors becomes increasingly difficult.

These AI trainers aren’t always subject matter experts, mind you. Last year, OpenAI got caught crowd sourcing the effort to Kenyan workers — and paying them less than $2 an hour — to improve its models’ performance.

a criticGPT screenshot
OpenAI

This issue is especially difficult when refining the system’s code generation capabilities, which is where CriticGPT comes in.

“We’ve trained a model, based on GPT-4, called CriticGPT, to catch errors in ChatGPT’s code output,” the company explained in a blog post Thursday. “We found that when people get help from CriticGPT to review ChatGPT code they outperform those without help 60 percent of the time.”

What’s more, the company released a whitepaper on the subject, titled “LLM Critics Help Catch LLM Bugs,” which found that “LLMs catch substantially more inserted bugs than qualified humans paid for code review, and further that model critiques are preferred over human critiques more than 80 percent of the time.”

Interestingly, the study also found that when humans collaborated with CriticGPT, the AI’s rate of hallucinating responses was lower than when CriticGPT did the work alone, but that rate of hallucination was still higher than if a human just did the work by themselves.

Andrew Tarantola
Andrew Tarantola is a journalist with more than a decade reporting on emerging technologies ranging from robotics and machine…
ChatGPT vs. Perplexity: battle of the AI search engines
Perplexity on Nothing Phone 2a.

The days of Google's undisputed internet search dominance may be coming to an end. The rise of generative AI has ushered in a new means of finding information on the web, with ChatGPT and Perplexity AI leading the way.

Unlike traditional Google searches, these platforms scour the internet for information regarding your query, then synthesize an answer using a conversational tone rather than returning a list of websites where the information can be found. This approach has proven popular with users, even though it's raised some serious concerns with the content creators that these platforms scrape for their data. But which is best for you to actually use? Let's dig into how these two AI tools differ, and which will be the most helpful for your prompts.
Pricing and tiers
Perplexity is available at two price points: free and Pro. The free tier is available to everybody and offers unlimited "Quick" searches, 3 "Pro" searches per day, and access to the standard Perplexity AI model. The Pro plan, which costs $20/month, grants you unlimited Quick searches, 300 Pro searches per day, your choice of AI model (GPT-4o, Claude-3, or LLama 3.1), the ability to upload and analyze unlimited files as well as visualize answers using Playground AI, DALL-E, and SDXL.

Read more
​​OpenAI spills tea on Musk as Meta seeks block on for-profit dreams
A digital image of Elon Musk in front of a stylized background with the Twitter logo repeating.

OpenAI has been on a “Shipmas” product launch spree, launching its highly-awaited Sora video generator and onboarding millions of Apple ecosystem members with the Siri-ChatGPT integration. The company has also expanded its subscription portfolio as it races toward a for-profit status, which is reportedly a hot topic of debate internally.

Not everyone is happy with the AI behemoth abandoning its nonprofit roots, including one of its founding fathers and now rival, Elon Musk. The xAI chief filed a lawsuit against OpenAI earlier this year and has also been consistently taking potshots at the company.

Read more
ChatGPT has folders now
ChatGPT Projects

OpenAI is once again re-creating a Claude feature in ChatGPT. The company announced during Friday's "12 Days of OpenAI" event that its chatbot will now offer a folder system called "Projects" to help users organize their chats and data.

“This is really just another organizational tool. I think of these as smart folders,” Thomas Dimson, an OpenAI staff member, said during the live stream.

Read more