Meta Hopes to Dethrone OpenAI
Meta's hope to dethrone OpenAI may be a run for their money as they dive further in the competitive AI arena.
Meta has launched Llama 3.1, its latest AI model, and it's open-source. Mark Zuckerberg claims it can outperform OpenAI’s GPT-4 and Anthropic’s Claude 3.5 Sonnet. He believes Llama 3.1 will surpass ChatGPT in user numbers by the end of the year.
Zuckerberg champions open-source AI. He argues it fosters innovation and prevents dependency on closed vendors. Meta's Llama models are free to use and available for customization, setting them apart from proprietary models.
While I also champion open-source tools, especially in technology, Meta’s debate does not change the ongoing challenges and scrutiny that OpenAI and other AI systems continue to face. Which is the data privacy problem and ethical AI usage. Many have already forgotten that Meta'AI uses Instagram and Facebook posts to train its AI system.
The competition to dethrone OpenAI is fierce. NVIDIA and Perplexity also aim to lead in AI. Meta’s integration of Llama into its social media platforms could be an advantage as it will leverage its large user base.
Llama 3.1 might technically rival top models, but the real test lies in ethical deployment and user trust. The AI landscape needs solutions that go beyond technical “advancements”, addressing privacy and ethical issues head-on. Meta’s journey to surpass OpenAI is promising but fraught with challenges the entire industry faces as a whole.
In other news:
CrowdStrike offers a $10 apology gift card to say sorry for outage
After a massive global outage caused by a botched update, CrowdStrike disrupted airports, banks, businesses, and hospitals. The chaos rendered around 8.5 million Windows devices unusable, resulting in delays and operational halts worldwide. In response, CrowdStrike offered affected partners a $10 Uber Eats gift card as an apology, a gesture that has been met with widespread frustration and disbelief.
The audacity. No one wants a $10 gift card; people want the systems they rely on in their everyday life to simply work; people's data and livelihoods are literally in the hands of these huge tech companies, and no, they aren’t protecting it to the ability you think they are.
In fact, one measly error and everything could go to shit. Our current system is too vulnerable, and something needs to change.It's clear that more substantial measures are needed to ensure the safety and reliability of the technology that underpins our daily lives.