GPT-4 is the successor of GPT-3. It used an order of magnitude more training data and weights in its deep neural network. It furthered speculation as to the potential for true artificial general intelligence. Fears about intellectual property continued, but in addition the ability to create apparently convincing argments (albeit sometimes including entirely fictitious evidence, called hallucinating) led to angst in education as it added to existing problems of essay mills and plagiarism.
Used in Chap. 1: page 7; Chap. 20: page 314; Chap. 23: page 366
Used in glossary entries: artificial general intelligence, deep neural network, GPT-3, intellectual property
Links:
openai.com:
OpenAI: GPT-4