OpenAI’s new “ChatGPT Gov” chatbot is designed for the US government. In its press release, OpenAI mentions that the new chatbot is “a tailored version of ChatGPT.” Itll
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.
Global tech investor SoftBank Group is in discussions to lead the round, with plans to contribute between $15 billion and $25 billion.
OpenAI itself has been accused of building ChatGPT by inappropriately accessing content it didn't have the rights to.
Did the upstart Chinese tech company DeepSeek copy ChatGPT to make the artificial intelligence technology that shook Wall Street this week?
OpenAI's new AI chatbot is an expansion on its flagship ChatGPT product. The new tool, ChatGPT Gov, is specifically for use by U.S. government agencies.
In partnership with Microsoft, OpenAI will deploy its o1 model—or a variant of it—on the Los Alamos National Laboratory’s newly launched Venado supercomputer, powered by NVIDIA’s Grace Hopper architec
The product is not approved for government use yet, but OpenAI of course hopes President Trump will speed things up.
OpenAI's o1 reasoning model usually requires a costly subscription, but it's now free to all Microsoft Copilot users. This move follows a surge in popularity for Chinese AI app Deepseek and its free reasoning model earlier this week.
Learn more about OpenAI's ChatGPT Gov, an AI tool designed to streamline agencies' access to the company's frontier models.
Teymour Taj explores the implications of the launch of the new Chinese AI chatbot which sent tech stocks plunging