OpenAI, an Artificial Intelligence (AI) powerhouse that has taken the AI world by storm by offering ChatGPT chatbot, is popular San-Francisco based startup OpenAI which is informally known as “GPT-6” in China. and has announced a trademark for a next-generation large language model called “GPT-7”. The new models are going to be much more powerful than the current GPT-3 models.
If we believe the news of the announcement of “GPT-6” and “GPT-7” to be true then the company led by Sam Altman is now planning to develop the next generation LLM with better capabilities which will help us by 2024. Another update may come out regarding this.
The corporation has filed two Chinese trademark applications for GPT-6 and two more for GPT-7, according to the South China Morning Post, citing documents from the trademark office of China’s National Intellectual Property Administration. Meanwhile, OpenAI has submitted an application to a Chinese business, OpenAI Opco. As of now, there is no OpenAI service available in China including Hong Kong.
Looking at the evolution of ChatGPT, OpenAI has improved the capabilities of its deep learning LLM since the launch of ChatGPT last year. ChatGPT was initially built as GPT-3.5 which included 175 billion parameters, then OpenAI released the ChatGPT GPT 4 model which is available to ChatGPT Plus users.
OpenAI Declaration of “GPT-6” and “GPT-7” trademarks
Having announced trademarks under the names “GPT-6” and “GPT-7”, it now appears that ChatGPT Free will soon offer a new major language model to users. Two Chinese trademark applications were submitted for GPT-6 under Class 9, which covers apparatus for scientific or research purposes, and Class 42, technical services and designs. Along with this, two more filings have also been submitted for GPT-7 under goods categories.
OpenAI CEO Altman Ho was previously removed from the same post during a meeting, but at the time of his sudden resignation the company was not providing training on GPT-5, the replacement for GPT-4. Now this month ChatGPT has announced the launch of the new GPT-4 Turbo model, it is more capable, less expensive and offers a 128K context window. While the company has also celebrated reaching 100 million weekly active users, their next aim is to reach new bigger language models.
OpenAI aims to create the next generation LLM and with the “GPT-6” and “GPT-7” trademarks, the company is pushing the boundaries. Also speaking at the company’s inaugural developer conference, Altman said that more than two million developers use ChatGPT, including more than 92% of Fortune 500 organizations.
OpenAI has not specified when GPT-6 and GPT-7 will be released, although the trademark applications suggest that OpenAI is on track to develop these next-generation LLMs. GPT-4 Turbo can parse over 300 pages of text in a single prompt thanks to its 128k context window. The business said it has “enhanced GPT-4 Turbo functionality to deliver 3x lower costs for input tokens and 2x lower costs for output tokens compared to GPT-4.”
Sam Altman is back as CEO, Mira Murati as CTO and Greg Brockman as President. OpenAI has a new initial board. Messages from @sama and board chair @btaylor https://t.co/sP0kAQIeKg
— OpenAI (@OpenAI) November 30, 2023
In addition to GPT-4 Turbo, the company is also introducing a new version of GPT-3.5 Turbo, which supports 16K context window by default. It also makes it more accurate and reliable than the first version. To assist GPT developers in creating agent-like experiences within their own applications, OpenAI has also released the Assistant API.
OpenAI Some researchers were concerned that a project called Q* might be a breakthrough in the search for artificial general intelligence (AGI), a type of AI that might be able to understand and reason like humans. However, he was concerned that AGI could pose a threat to humanity, so he wanted to slow down the development of Q*.
Meanwhile, a conflict began between researchers who wanted to develop Q* and those who were concerned about its potential dangers. This conflict ultimately led to the exile of some researchers who wanted to slow down the development of Q*.