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Grok cheered. Claude refused. The results say something about who controls the AI, and what it's allowed to say.
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The next time you're talking about AI over dinner or drinks, know these terms to sound smart.
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Grok, Gemini, Meta, Claude, and ChatGPT all had something to say about ICE. And some of it sounded like it came straight out of a protest rally.
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As reported by Futurism, ChatGPT lost a chess game against the classic Atari 2600 gaming console. Robert Caruso, an engineer at Citrix, organised the game between the AI and a simple 1977 chess program released for the Atari 2600.
During the game, ChatGPT made a series of embarrassing mistakes, misread moves, and kept losing track of its own pieces. "ChatGPT got absolutely wrecked on the beginner level," Caruso wrote. In the end, the AI chatbot simply gave up and lost.
The fiasco is an important reminder that LLMs—even the "reasoning" ones—are still just language prediction models at their core. It's clear evidence that dedicated tools that are trained or coded for a specific purpose, like the Atari 2600's chess program, are still better than AI assistants that are supposed to do "everything." This should be an important lesson for tech companies like OpenAI and users who rely on AI tools.
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Stay up to date on the latest AI technology advancements and learn about the challenges and opportunities AI presents now and for the future.
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