1. Home
  2. AI Chatbots

AI Chatbots

7 AI Chatbots Predict Bitcoin’s Price Post-Halving; See $80K-$100K by Year-End

7 AI Chatbots Predict Bitcoin’s Price Post-Halving; See K-0K by Year-EndOn April 28, 2024, the price of bitcoin was coasting along at $62,900 per unit as of 7:28 p.m. Eastern Time (ET). Since then, the price fell below the $62K mark by Monday morning ET, only to climb back above $62,000 by mid-afternoon. It has been nine days since the last halving event and 109 […]

Yuga Labs restructures again, EU touts metaverse health benefits: Nifty Newsletter

OpenAI hit with privacy complaint in Austria, potential EU law breach

Austrian data rights group Noyb filed a privacy complaint against OpenAI, accusing its ChatGPT of providing false information and potentially breaching EU privacy regulations.

The prominent artificial intelligence (AI) developer OpenAI has been placed at the center of a new privacy complaint launched by a data rights protection advocacy group in Austria.

On April 29, Noyb opened the complaint alleging that OpenAI has not fixed false information provided by its generative AI chatbot ChatGPT. The group said these actions, or lack thereof, could breach privacy rules in the European Union.

According to the group, the complainant of the case, an unnamed public figure, asked OpenAI’s chatbot for information about himself and was consistently provided with incorrect information.

Read more

Yuga Labs restructures again, EU touts metaverse health benefits: Nifty Newsletter

EU sets up research hub to analyze Big Tech’s AI algorithms

The research unit will be tasked with auditing the AI-backed algorithms used by large technology firms such as Google and Meta.

The European Commission has launched a new research unit that will investigate the impact of the algorithms made and used by prominent online platforms and search engines such as Facebook and Google.

The research unit dubbed the European Centre for Algorithmic Transparency (ECAT), launched on April 18 and will help the Commission identify and address any potential risks posed by these platforms.

ECAT will be embedded within the European Union’s existing Joint Research Centre (JRC) which conducts research on a broad range of subjects including Artificial Intelligence (AI).

The team will consist of “data scientists, AI experts, social scientists and legal experts” that will analyze and evaluate the AI-backed algorithms used by Big Tech firms.

AI-based programs are built using a series of complex algorithms, meaning ECAT will also be looking at algorithms that underpin AI chatbots such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which some believe could eventually replace search engines.

On its website, the Commission claims ECAT will conduct algorithmic accountability and transparency audits as required by the Digital Services Act (DSA) — a set of European Union rules enforceable as of Nov. 16, 2022.

According to the EU’s internal market commissioner, Thierry Breton, ECAT will “look under the hood” of large search engines and online platforms in order to “see how their algorithms function and contribute to the spread of illegal and harmful content.”

Related: UK may have crypto regulation within a year, says senior minister

Nearly a dozen EU politicians called for the “safe” development of AI in a signed open letter on April 16.

The lawmakers asked United States President Joe Biden and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen to convene a summit on AI and agree on a set of governing principles for the development, control and deployment of the tech.

Tech entrepreneur Elon Musk also had issues with the development of AI, arguing on an April 17 Fox News interview that AI chatbots like ChatGPT have a left-wing bias and said that he was developing an alternative called “TruthGPT.”

Asia Express: Bitcoin glory on Chinese TikTok, 30M mainland users, Justin Sun saga

Yuga Labs restructures again, EU touts metaverse health benefits: Nifty Newsletter

BingChatGPT ‘pump and dump’ tokens emerging by the dozen: PeckShield

Blockchain security firm PeckShield on Twitter said it has found dozens of pump-and-dump tokens purporting to be related to ChatGPT.

Blockchain security firm PeckShield has raised the alarm after finding dozens of tokens purporting to be related to artificial intelligence (AI) powered chatbot ChatGPT.

“In a Feb. 20 post, the firm revealed at least three "BingChatGPT” tokens appear to be part of honeypot schemes — a smart contract that tricks a user into sending Ether (ETH), which the attacker then traps and retrieves.

Some of the addresses reportedly associated with the BingChatGPT tokens. Source: PeckShield

According to PeckShield, at least two of the tokens identified have already lost nearly 100% of their value, while a third is at a 65% loss — in what is often referred to as a “pump and dump” scheme or “rug pull.”

A pump-and-dump scheme typically involves the creators orchestrating a campaign of misleading statements and hype to persuade investors into purchasing tokens, then secretly selling their stake in the scheme when prices go up. 

At least one of the bad actors behind the tokens, “Deployer 0xb583,” is responsible for creating “dozens of tokens with a pump & dump scheme,” said PeckShield.

While PeckShield did not explain why the bad actors are using the name BingChatGPT for their tokens, the scammers could be trying to take advantage of the Feb. 7 announcement that OpenAI’s ChatGPT tech is being integrated into Bing and Microsoft’s Edge web browser.

The token’s name might be an attempt to trick victims into thinking they are somehow related to Microsoft and take advantage of the hype around AI chatbots.

Blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis recently noted in a Feb. 16 report that nearly 10,000 new tokens launched in 2022 had all the on-chain characteristics of being pump-and-dump schemes.

According to the Blockchain analytics firm, 1.1 million tokens were launched last year, but only 40,521 had an “impact on the crypto ecosystem,”with at least ten swaps over four consecutive days of trading in the week following their launch.

An example of a crypto pump and dump scheme. Source: Chainalysis

"Of the 40,521 tokens launched in 2022 that gained sufficient traction to be worth analyzing, 9,902, or 24%, saw a price decline in the first week indicative of possible pump and dump activity," the firm said. 

Related: Wormhole hacker moves another $46M of stolen funds

While a price drop on its own is not an indication of wrongdoing on the part of token creators, the firm noted that it examined 25 in particular and found “they were almost certainly designed for a pump and dump,” with malicious honeypot code that prevents new buyers from selling the token.

Yuga Labs restructures again, EU touts metaverse health benefits: Nifty Newsletter