OpenAI posts rewards of up to $20,000 for users to find ChatGPT bugs

Per Forbes

OpenAI has posted a reward for users if they can assist the company in improving its ChatGPT tool. The company is offering up to $20,000 if the users can find bugs in the software.

The company wants users to find glitches and security issues within the AI tool. OpenAI also has a post on bugcrowd, showing that it offered $200 to $6,500 per vulnerability and up to a $20,000 maximum reward.

The post detailed how they appreciated the contributions of ethical hackers to help them uphold high privacy and security standards. It also provided examples of safety issues within and without their scope.

Here are examples of safety issues that are out of scope:

  • Jailbreaks/Safety Bypasses (e.g. DAN and related prompts)
  • Getting the model to say bad things to you
  • Getting the model to tell you how to do bad things
  • Getting the model to write malicious code for you

Recently, the Biden administration officials started to have discussions as to potential regulations regarding AI systems. These included regulations for ChatGPT, BardAI, and other AI tools.

However, no specific regulations were suggested as of press time.

It was also recently found that should ChatGPT's technology replace software engineers, the country that would be most impacted would be India. So far, India has over 5 million coders.

Two recent studies showed ChatGPT's capabilities when it comes to finance. The studies found that the AI tool was already capable of predicting stock moves based on news headlines.

Within the study, ChatGPT used technology to convert text data, including news articles, tweets, and speeches, and transform them into actionable trading signals.

This comes as ChatGPT has shown its use in the finance space, being able to carry out finance-related tasks with early results already showing the tool's competence. This shows that OpenAI's tool has reportedly reached a new level of understanding context and nuance.

See flow at unusualwhales.com/flow.

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Forbes