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Meta hires four more OpenAI researchers: Report

Meta hires four more OpenAI researchers: Report

Meta Platforms is hiring four more OpenAI artificial intelligence researchers, The Information reported on Saturday.
The researchers, Shengjia Zhao, Jiahui Yu, Shuchao Bi and Hongyu Ren have each agreed to join, the report said, citing a person familiar with their hiring. Earlier this week, the Instagram parent hired Lucas Beyer, Alexander Kolesnikov and Xiaohua Zhai, who were all working in OpenAI's Zurich office, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Meta and ChatGPT maker OpenAI did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.
The company has recently been pushing to hire more researchers from OpenAI to join chief executive Mark Zuckerberg's superintelligence efforts.
Reuters could not immediately verify the report.

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Warning: Using ChatGPT for these 10 things could put you at serious risk
Warning: Using ChatGPT for these 10 things could put you at serious risk

Hindustan Times

time16 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

Warning: Using ChatGPT for these 10 things could put you at serious risk

From writing emails and planning trips to solving maths problems and fixing code, ChatGPT has become a go-to tool for many of us. Some people use it to write essays, others ask it to suggest recipes, learn languages or even decide what to watch next on Netflix. It's fast, helpful and always available. That's what makes it so tempting to rely on. Trusting ChatGPT too much blindly can put you in serious trouble. Stop doing these 10 things immediately.(Pexels) But just because ChatGPT can answer our questions doesn't mean it should! The more we use it, the more we start trusting it with things that may be too personal, sensitive or even risky. And that's where the problems begin. So while it's great for basic tasks or quick explanations, there are some things you should never use ChatGPT for. Here's a list of 10 situations where it's better to stop and think before asking AI for help: 1. Diagnosing health problems Feeling unwell? It's tempting to ask ChatGPT what's wrong, but its answers can be way off, jumping from flu to cancer in seconds. It can't examine you or run tests like a real doctor. At best, it can help you prepare questions for your appointment. 2. Dealing with mental health Have you been turning to GPT to talk if you're stressed, anxious or dealing with something heavy? ChatGPT might offer calming tips. But it's not a therapist. It feels like it listens, but it can't truly listen, understand emotions or guide you through hard times like a real person can. 3. Making emergency decisions In an emergency, like a gas leak, fire or health scare, don't waste time asking ChatGPT what to do. It can't sense danger or call for help. Every second matters in a crisis. Step outside, call emergency services, and stay safe. Use ChatGPT later to understand what happened, not while it's happening. 4. Planning your taxes or finances ChatGPT can help explain financial terms, but it doesn't know your income, expenses or tax situation. Its advice might be outdated or too general. It can also miss important deductions or give incorrect guidance. Sharing sensitive information like your bank details or Social Security number can put you at risk. For tax or financial planning, it's always safer to consult a real expert 5. Sharing confidential or personal information Avoid putting private or sensitive information into ChatGPT. This includes legal documents, medical records, ID details, or anything protected by privacy laws. Once you enter it, you lose control over where that data goes. It could be stored, reviewed, or even used to train future models. If you wouldn't share it publicly, don't share it with a chatbot. 6. Doing anything illegal Trying to ask ChatGPT to help with something shady? Bad idea. Not only is it wrong, but it can also get you into serious trouble. 7. Checking breaking news or real-time updates ChatGPT can now pull live information like stock prices and news headlines, but it doesn't update automatically. You have to keep asking for new data each time. For real-time updates, it's better to follow news websites, official alerts or live feeds. ChatGPT is helpful, but not a replacement for breaking news sources. 8. Gambling Using ChatGPT to place bets might seem fun, but it's risky. It can get player stats, injuries, or scores wrong. It also can't predict future results. Even if it sounds confident, it's still guessing. Gambling with AI advice can lead to losses. 9. Writing legal documents ChatGPT can explain legal terms, but it shouldn't be used to write wills or legal contracts. Laws vary by state and even by county, and small mistakes, like missing a signature, can make a document invalid. Use ChatGPT to prepare questions or understand the basics, but always let a licensed lawyer handle the final document for legal safety. 10. Creating original art You can use it to brainstorm ideas, but calling AI-made content your own is unfair to real artists. Be honest about what's human and what's not.

India's PC penetration is 20 years behind China — And that's a huge opportunity: Logitech
India's PC penetration is 20 years behind China — And that's a huge opportunity: Logitech

Hindustan Times

time16 minutes ago

  • Hindustan Times

India's PC penetration is 20 years behind China — And that's a huge opportunity: Logitech

In January 2025, Logitech made a quiet but powerful move in the AI space. Through its Logitech G brand, Streamlabs partnered with NVIDIA and Inworld AI to introduce an AI agent designed to be a streamer's 3D sidekick, producer, and tech support rolled into one. 'We do have AI in our products, but we don't talk about AI for the sake of it. We talk about it only when it's meaningfully integrated," said For a company that dominates the peripherals market, Logitech's strategy in the ongoing AI boom raises a timely question: What kind of tools—or shovels—is Logitech offering in this new AI gold rush? Moninder Jain, Vice-President & Head of Emerging Markets at Logitech, offers a refreshingly grounded answer. In an interview with HT, he said, 'We do have AI in our products, but we don't talk about AI for the sake of it. We talk about it only when it's meaningfully integrated.' One of the more ambitious initiatives is Logitech's Agentive AI, built in collaboration with NVIDIA. 'It acts like both a producer and a wingman,' said Jain, helping streamers enhance their live performance while guiding them in real time. Ultimately, Jain's stance is clear: 'Our philosophy has always been: do first, then talk. We prefer to showcase what we've already built rather than talk in vague terms about the future. Today, AI is integral. Without AI, there is no tech anymore.' PC market in India Logitech sees India on the cusp of a major shift in personal computing. Jain noted a low PC penetration in India, roughly where China was two decades ago, which he believes is turning into an opportunity. 'With India's per capita income on the rise and PC shipments starting to grow, we're optimistic that the adoption curve will steepen,' he said. He referenced external market reports that show flat growth but asserted that Logitech's internal data suggests a much sharper increase, driven by factors such as digital adoption, remote work, and demand for productivity tools. Echoing this optimism, Jain pointed out that the pandemic highlighted a key insight: 'Serious tasks—whether it's programming, designing, or document creation—can't be done effectively on a mobile screen.' More Indian consumers and professionals are realising the value of a larger screen and dedicated workspace. Growth in education technology, work-from-home setups, and content creation tools further support the trend. 'People are recognising the value of having a larger screen and a dedicated workspace,' he said, signalling confidence that India is poised for vertical growth in PC adoption. Integrating AI into Hardware, Not A New Standalone Device Asked whether Logitech plans to develop a new AI-centric device (like a ChatGPT-enabled gadget), Jain made it clear that Logitech's strategy is to embed AI deeply into existing hardware rather than launch standalone AI devices. 'Currently, we're focused on integrating AI into everything we do—particularly into our hardware. A completely new, standalone AI device is not on the roadmap for now,' he stated. Instead, Logitech continues to weave AI into peripherals people already use, ensuring incremental improvements across its product lines. Video Conferencing and Hybrid Work in India The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated remote and hybrid work, and video conferencing has become a permanent part of the professional landscape. Jain noted that in India, video collaboration is still in early stages of adoption: even now, only about a single-digit percentage of conference rooms are equipped for video meetings. Pre-COVID, this percentage was even lower, which means there is 'massive headroom for growth,' he said. Logitech entered the video conferencing market before the pandemic and disrupted it by offering affordable, USB-powered, platform-agnostic solutions (compatible with Zoom, Teams, Google Meet, etc.). Customers had previously spent tens of thousands of dollars on complex setups; Logitech's plug-and-play devices like the Rally and MeetUp brought enterprise-grade audio and video to small and medium meeting rooms without traditional complexity or cost. Jain observed that the market continues to grow as hybrid work norms take hold, stating that 'video conferencing is still in its early adoption stage' and that there's 'huge scope' for expansion in India's offices and educational institutions. India's Gaming Market The gaming ecosystem in India is 'still in its formative years,' Jain observed. Unlike countries such as Vietnam and Thailand, India lacks certain infrastructure like established gaming cafes, structured tournaments, and stable eSports teams with formal contracts. He pointed out specific challenges that inhibit growth: Unreliable power supply and intermittent internet connectivity, which disrupt gameplay. Limited access to organised competitions and professional training. A shortage of gaming-friendly venues and community support. Despite these challenges, Jain is hopeful. He believes that ongoing improvements in digital infrastructure and the increasing interest of India's young population will help the gaming market catch up. In the meantime, Logitech continues to support Indian gamers through its hardware and esports collaborations, anticipating that as conditions improve, the market will expand rapidly. Mobile finder: Best price of iPhone 16 Logitech's Internal Use of AI Logitech isn't only embedding AI in its products; it's also using AI internally to boost productivity. Jain revealed that the company applies AI for various enterprise-level tasks, from improving internal tools to analysing data for product innovation. While specific platforms weren't named, he said teams are free to experiment with tools like ChatGPT for brainstorming and drafting, with the caveat that sensitive information must be handled carefully. He emphasized an important balance: AI is a 'co-pilot, not a decision-maker.' Logitech's policy advises caution when feeding confidential data into third-party AI, and always validates AI-generated outputs with human oversight ('Natural Intelligence'). In Jain's words: 'These tools are great for generating early drafts or design options, but we always validate and refine outputs through human intelligence.'

Why economists should like booze
Why economists should like booze

Mint

time26 minutes ago

  • Mint

Why economists should like booze

Sobriety is taking over the world. The amount of alcohol consumed globally is probably in decline for the first time in history. Across rich countries many members of Gen Z—born after the late 1990s—are shunning alcohol entirely: 30% of Americans in their 20s did not drink in the previous year. Even in France young professionals no longer have a pichet of wine with lunch. Elites seem especially likely to snub the bottle. Three of the past four American presidents are teetotal (Barack Obama enjoyed a martini). In Silicon Valley temperance is a status symbol. Marc Andreessen, an investor, quit alcohol in 2022. Sam Altman of OpenAI writes about 'how much changed when people stopped drinking alcohol all day". Elon Musk refers to alcohol as a 'legacy drug". Dinner meetings with founders are fuelled by green tea. An individual who gives up drinking can look forward to health benefits. They may lose weight. They may sleep better. Yet from an economist's point of view, teetotalism is an incoherent and damaging ideology—for three big reasons. First, teetotallers are free-riders. For generations alcohol consumption has sustained all manner of social and economic structures. The abstemious benefit from them but do not contribute. For instance, non-drinkers who go to social events are free-riding on the joviality of hard-working drinkers. What would happen to the social fabric if everyone stopped imbibing? Perhaps Joe Strummer of the Clash, an English rock band, was on to something when he apocryphally said that 'non-smokers should be banned from buying any product a smoker created". Or consider the economics of the restaurant industry. Alcohol offers higher profit margins than food as it requires less labour to prepare. Indeed, using official American data, your columnist estimates that booze accounts for all the profits of the restaurant industry. Drinkers subsidise non-drinkers. Those who order sparkling water can feel sanctimonious in the short run. But if no one orders a bottle of Bordeaux, many restaurants will go under. In San Francisco, Sobriety Central, they are closing by the dozen. Second, abstinence makes people lonelier. For centuries alcohol has served a social function. It helps people relax. Taking a drink also signals to others that you are happy to be slower and more vulnerable—that you have left your weapon at the door—which puts them at ease. A study from 2012 in Psychological Science found that alcohol increases social bonding. Robin Dunbar of Oxford University and colleagues find that frequenting a pub improves how engaged people feel with their community, in turn raising life satisfaction. It is not a stretch to say that alcohol has played a big evolutionary role in fostering human connection. Many couples credit alcohol, at least in part, for bringing them together. So it may not be a coincidence that the alcohol-shunning young are lonely. Americans aged 15 to 24 spend a third less time socialising than they did in the early 2000s. A study published in 2021 by Jean Twenge of San Diego State University and colleagues found 'worldwide increases in adolescent loneliness". Young people are having less sex than older generations. When it is harder to relax, partnering up is more difficult. The third factor in favour of booze relates to innovation. Today the world sees fewer breakthroughs. Hollywood sustains itself on remakes or sequels, not originals. A recent blog by Peter Ruppert, a consultant, finds the same trend for music: 'the pace of genuine sonic innovation has slowed dramatically". A paper published in 2020 by Nicholas Bloom of Stanford University and colleagues concludes that new ideas are 'harder to find". Productivity growth across the world is weak. Something has gone terribly wrong in the way that Western societies generate new ideas. In the short term, avoiding alcohol is helpful for working efficiently. If you have a big presentation tomorrow, it is a good idea to stay off the sauce tonight. But consider the kind of world that alcohol allows to exist—even if messily, unreliably and at some cost—and abstention seems less sensible. For centuries creative folk, from Aeschylus to Coleridge to Dickens, have relied on alcohol for inspiration. In the 1960s, when productivity was soaring, everyone was drunk all the time. No other drug has played such a consistent role in human innovation. Being intoxicated opens up the possibility of accidents of insight. Purely rational, linear minds have fewer of the flashes of brilliance that can turn an art form or an industry upside-down. It allows brains to disconnect. A study of American painters in 1946 by Ann Roe of Yale University noted that 'a nightly cocktail before dinner may contribute to the avoidance of a state of chronic tension, creative activity is at its height." Studies suggest that alcohol, deployed judiciously, can aid the creative process. Andrew Jarosz of Mississippi State University and colleagues have found that intoxicated people solved problems faster and 'were more likely to perceive their solutions as the result of a sudden insight". A similar paper by Mathias Benedek of the University of Graz, in Austria, and colleagues concludes that 'certain aspects of creative cognition benefit from mild attenuations of cognitive control". In the short run, intoxication may limit your brain's processing power—and that can be frustrating. The long-term effects are much less clear. Call me old-fashioned The best approach, as with most things in life, is moderation: not Ernest Hemingway-levels of drinking, but not abstention either. What leads to successful human relationships and breakthrough innovations remains poorly understood. So, even if you are a Silicon Valley whizzkid who wants to change the world, it is best not to mess around with traditions too much. Gin from the freezer, good vermouth, and a twist. Subscribers to The Economist can sign up to our Opinion newsletter, which brings together the best of our leaders, columns, guest essays and reader correspondence.

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