November 7 has been an intriguing day for the artificial intelligence space. Building on yesterday's OpenAI developer conference, new initiatives were unveiled today. In the first development, an AI called Autopilot, belonging to the British AI firm Luminance, negotiated a contract from the start to the end with another AI, without any involvement from humans. In other news, YouTube has finally begun testing its new AI chatbot that will appear under select videos. This and more in today's AI roundup. Let us take a closer look.
Luminance, a British AI firm, achieved a world-first by using their proprietary large language model (LLM) to enable AI to autonomously negotiate contracts with another AI system, eliminating the need for human involvement, reported CNBC. This innovation, called Autopilot, was designed to reduce the paperwork burden on lawyers, allowing them to focus on more creative aspects of their work.
“This is just AI negotiating with AI, right from opening a contract in Word all the way through to negotiating terms and then sending it to DocuSign,” Jaeger Glucina, chief of staff and managing director of Luminance told CNBC in an interview.
YouTube is introducing new experimental AI features, including a chatbot that provides information about videos, answers questions, recommends related content, and quizzes viewers to take quick trivia questions or help with educational videos, reported The Verge.
Additionally, there is an AI tool for summarizing video comments. These initiatives are part of Google's broader effort to integrate AI across its services, and YouTube has previously introduced AI features for video creators, such as AI-generated backgrounds, dubbing for language translation, video topic and audio
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