OpenAI GPT-4.5 Turbo Expected to Launch in June

The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Ministry of Public Security, and the State Administration of Radio and Television have jointly formulated the "Regulations on Identifying AI-Generated Synthetic Content." This new regulation aims to address societal issues stemming from the proliferation of AI-generated content, particularly the spread of misinformation affecting public rights and interests. The regulations mandate prominent labeling of all AI-generated synthetic content, including text, audio, images, and videos. This measure will effectively protect citizens, legal persons, and other organizations.
Recently, the Daye City People's Court in Hubei Province issued a verdict in a landmark case involving the use of artificial intelligence (AI) technology to write and profit from pornographic novels. Defendant Ke Mou was sentenced to ten months imprisonment and a fine of 5,000 yuan for the crime of producing, selling, and disseminating obscene materials for profit, and ordered to return his illegal gains. According to the prosecution, from November 2022 to March 2023, Ke Mou, a college-educated online literature author, used an AI program to write pornographic novels and published them on overseas pornographic websites, simultaneously...
OpenAI, in a recent submission to the US government on AI regulation, advocated for federal leadership in overseeing AI regulation, rather than allowing individual states to implement stricter rules. The company believes that unified federal regulation would foster innovation in the US AI sector and reduce inconsistencies across different state regulations. Image credit: Image generated by AI, image licensing service Midjourney. In this 15-page document, OpenAI notes that China's AI regulatory measures could potentially disadvantage the US.