While ChatGPT often provides truthful information to users, it does have the ability to "lie." Of course, ChatGPT doesn't decide to maliciously lie to users, as it simply can't do so. After all, ChatGPT is a language-processing tool, not an imitation of a real, sentient person.
However, ChatGPT can technically still lie through a phenomenon known as AI hallucination.
AI hallucination involves an AI system providing information that seems reasonable or plausible but, in reality, is not true at all. In fact, AI hallucination can provide information that it was never fed during its training period. Alternatively, it can occur when an AI system provides information unrelated to the prompt or request. An AI system may even claim to be human in a hallucination event.
AI systems, such as chatbots, fall into the hallucination trap for several reasons: their lack of real-world understanding, software bugs, and limitations on the data provided.
As previously stated, ChatGPT can only provide information using data published up to 2021, which certainly limits what kinds of prompts it can fulfill.
One of ChatGPT's big problems is that it can also fall victim to bias when giving users information. Even ChatGPT's creators have stated that the AI system has been "politically biased, offensive," and "otherwise objectionable" in the past. As reported by The Independent, ChatGPT's developers are committed to tackling this issue, but that doesn't mean it no longer poses a risk.
Source:
https://www.makeuseof.com/does-chatgpt-lie/
The RH850 microcontroller (MCU) from Renesas does not include neuromorphic architecture. The architecture supports various control functions but does not integrate neuromorphic computing features, which are typically associated with AI and machine learning tasks.
Source:
https://www.renesas.com/en/about/pr...ps-adopted-nissan-its-new-skyline-propilot-20
Source:
https://www.renesas.com/en/about/pr...tion-worlds-first-28nm-cross-domain-flash-mcu
Source:
https://www.renesas.com/en/about/pr...tion-worlds-first-28nm-cross-domain-flash-mcu