I mean, sometimes the whole story really is in the headline. OpenAI, the software company best-known for the various iterations of its ChatGPT text generator, has announced the acquisition of Global Illumination (GI), which describes itself as «a digital product company based in New York most recently working on Biomes.»
Biomes is an open source sandbox game with a visual style straight outta Stockholm. It's Minecraft, basically, but Minecraft hosted on Github and theoretically built alongside the community. The synergies between something like this and AI content generation seem obvious. OpenAI's announcement says the GI team is joining to «work on our core products including ChatGPT [and] has been leveraging AI to build creative tools, infrastructure, and digital experiences.»
So far, so normal for big tech: huge company swallows smaller company that has some desirable staff and ideas. What really jumped out at me with this one, however, was that I found out about it from a news article that was authored or at least co-authored by OpenAI's own chatbot.
You're going to love the name of this site: NFTNow, take a bow. The article is pretty plausible at first glance, though there's something slightly off about its sentence structure: «Notably, Global Illumination’s standout creation is an open-source video game called 'Biomes,' which the OpenAI community has already started to draw comparisons of the game’s graphic design to Microsoft's OG game, 'Minecraft.'»
That's a real mess of a sentence that gets odder the more you look at it, and the vocabulary I can't quite get over is calling Minecraft «Microsoft's OG game». Nevermind the fact that Mojang Studios make Minecraft, what exactly is «original gangster» about a cutesy
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