Previous close | 17.35 |
Open | 17.40 |
Bid | 0.00 |
Ask | 0.00 |
Strike | 240.00 |
Expiry date | 2024-06-21 |
Day's range | 17.30 - 17.40 |
Contract range | N/A |
Volume | |
Open interest | 1.74k |
Big tech leaders are calling for a six-month pause on experiments for A.I. systems more powerful than GPT-4. Tesla & Twitter CEO Elon Musk, Apple Co-Founder Steve Wozniak, and 2020 presidential candidate Andrew Yang are three of the 1,000+ signatories on an open letter saying A.I. systems can have "profound risks to society and humanity." Yahoo Finance’s Dave Briggs breaks down why despite some valid concerns brought up in the letter, Elon Musk is the wrong person to spread this message. Yahoo Finance’s Seana Smith joins in to discuss the A.I. race. Key video moments 00:12 On who signed the letter 00:32 On Elon Musk’s messaging 01:28 On Musk’s time at Twitter 01:40 On popularity of ChatGPT 02:00 On Bill Gates’ opinion 02:30 On the irony of Musk signing the letter 03:20 On Musk being a founder of OpenAI
Apple Pay Later allows consumers to apply for Apple Pay Later loans of $50 to $1,000.
BRUSSELS (Reuters) -Alphabet's Google Cloud has accused Microsoft of anti-competitive cloud computing practices and criticised imminent deals with several European cloud vendors, saying these do not solve broader concerns about its licensing terms. In Google Cloud's first public comments on Microsoft and its European deals its Vice President Amit Zavery told Reuters the company has raised the issue with antitrust agencies and urged European Union antitrust regulators to take a closer look. In response, Microsoft referred to a blogpost in May last year where its president Brad Smith said it 'has a healthy number two position when it comes to cloud services, with just over 20 percent market share of global cloud services revenues'.