Scarlett Johansson does NOT want to be turned into an AI chatbot… And she ain’t about to let ChatGPT use a knockoff version of her voice for theirs! In a lengthy statement released by her rep on Tuesday, the Avengers actress accused OpenAI…
Showrunners Matt Nix and Mark Groffman broke down the ways they’re already experimenting with language learning models during a panel for AI on the Lot on May 16.
ChatGPT has been breaking daily traffic records since it recently launched new features, according to Similarweb. Following OpenAI unveiling a new artificial intelligence model, GPT-4o, last week, the ChatGPT website received over 100…
NEW YORK — OpenAI on Monday said it plans to halt the use of one of its ChatGPT voices that “Her” actor Scarlett Johansson says sounds “eerily similar” to her own.
SAG-AFTRA, the union representing thousands of actors and other media professionals, threw their support behind actress Scarlett Johansson after she expressed concerns over ChatGPT's new voiced artificial intelligence (AI) assistant that…
The 'Black Widow' actress revealed that she's taking legal action against OpenAI, after the company released their 'Sky' voice assistant, which sounds "eerily similar" to her.
OpenAI's recent launch of its new flagship GPT-4o model with reasoning capabilities across, text, audio, and voice has contributed to ChatGPT's "biggest spike ever" in revenue and downloads on mobile.
X boss Elon Musk has commented on the recent beef between Scarlett Johansson and Sam Altman after his company allegedly used her voice without consent for a new ChatGPT project
On the day of GPT-4o's release, ChatGPT's mobile revenue rose 22%, the most revenue for the app ever in a single day. What's driving people to pay for GPT-4o when it's available for free?
Soundalike Inspired by the 2013 film "Her," OpenAI used a voice that sounded a whole lot like Scarlett Johansson's as its new ChatGPT voice assistant — even though the actress repeatedly denied the company consent to use her voice.…
Creatives have always had to fight to stop people reproducing their work, but AI poses a completely new threat at a scale never before seen, writes James Muldoon