Microsoft is planning to provide an improved version of the well-known ChatGPT chatbot that puts more emphasis on security and privacy.
This version will target institutions such as healthcare providers, banks and others, according to a new report published by tech website The Information.
The move comes from Microsoft to assuage the concerns of various organizations wary of using ChatGPT and prohibits relying on it to work with their employees so that sensitive data is not leaked that could harm the interests of the organization or its customers. .
away from possible leaks
The report also states that the expected product from Microsoft will be announced “later during the current quarter of the year”, and it will be a version of ChatGPT running on dedicated servers, separate and isolated from those used by other companies or individual users who use different versions. bot in the Edge browser, Windows system or through any other application or service, according to the Arabic tech news portal.
This will protect sensitive data from potential leakage and will not be used to train the GPT language model for the ChatGPT chatbot.
These safer, more secure and data-saving versions will also be more expensive to run and use than the standard bot version. Prices for these future versions of ChatGPT will be 10 times higher than the regular version currently in the hands of users.
similar product
OpenAI, the main developer of the robot, also plans to launch a similar product in the coming months, as the data entered into the robot by corporate employee accounts will not be used to train the language model on which it is based.
The main difference between the Microsoft and OpenAI products is that the Microsoft version will use the company’s Azure cloud platform servers as the back end instead of competing Amazon web servers.
Notably, Microsoft can resell OpenAI products led by chatbot ChatGPT under terms agreed between the two companies and an existing agreement for years to come after Microsoft has invested billions of dollars in investments in OpenAI. But it looks like this agreement could eventually lead to direct competition between the two companies.
Samsung and other companies
And recent press reports have revealed that Samsung has banned the use of generative AI tools such as ChatGPT or Google Bard for its employees after several cases of employees accidentally leaking sensitive data, and this made them available to other companies and users if the robot asked about this.
While Samsung has followed the lead of several other companies and institutions such as banks JP Morgan and Goldman Sachs, financial services company Citigroup and communications company Verizon, while the list is expected to be long during the coming period.
The ChatGPT chatbot was also temporarily banned in Italy before censors there withdrew and lifted the ban after the developer company made some changes to improve security and improve privacy.


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