Latest news with #ChatGPTAgent


NDTV
15 hours ago
- Business
- NDTV
Meet Yash Kumar, The Lead Behind OpenAI's ChatGPT Agent That Works By Self
Yash Kumar's Chatgpt Agent 2025: OpenAI recently introduced a new capability in its chatbot ChatGPT - the ChatGPT Agent, which can semi-autonomously perform digital tasks without requiring constant user intervention. The project is currently being led by Yash Kumar, a graduate of the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Hyderabad. The new ChatGPT Agent is designed to handle tasks from start to finish - whether it's preparing meal plans, booking tickets, or summarizing meetings on your calendar. The agent can think, plan, and act on the user's behalf using its own virtual computer. It switches between browsers, applications, and terminals to complete tasks end-to-end. The tool is now available to users, but it remains a work in progress and continues to be improved. All About Yash Kumar- Educational and Corporate Background Yash Kumar, an Indian-origin technologist, is a Member of Technical Staff at OpenAI's San Francisco headquarters and currently serves as the project lead for the ChatGPT Agent. He joined OpenAI in 2023 and previously worked at several well-known companies, including Google, where he spent eight years, and DoorDash. He earned his Bachelor's degree in Computer Science from IIT Hyderabad in 2011. In his previous roles, Yash primarily led engineering teams - including serving as head of the merchant engineering division at DoorDash and overseeing engineering, product, and design teams at Scratch. While the ChatGPT Agent is nearly autonomous, it still requires user approval for high-stakes actions such as purchases or logging into certain websites.

Mint
17 hours ago
- Business
- Mint
Weekly Tech Recap: Perplexity Pro goes free for Airtel users, ChatGPT agent launched and more
With news coming in throughout the week, it can be difficult to sift out the important updates from the noise. To keep readers up to date, we've compiled the Weekly Tech Recap, where we take a look at the top news that shook up the world of technology. This week, OpenAI unveiled ChatGPT Agent, Perplexity announced free Pro subscriptions for Airtel users, OnePlus revealed sale details for the Pad 3, and more. Earlier in the week, Airtel announced that its prepaid and postpaid customers will be able to enjoy Perplexity Pro subscription for free for a year, a service that costs upwards of over ₹ 17,000/ year. Notably, Perplexity Pro subscription allows users access to the latest AI models from OpenAI, Google, Anthropic and xAI. Soon after announcing the offer, Perplexity gained popularity in India and the app was soon ranked number 1 in the top free app category on the Apple App Store, dethroning ChatGPT at the top. Click here to read the full report OnePlus has announced that its latest tablet, the OnePlus Pad 3 will go on sale in India in the month of September. The tablet was first teased during the OnePlus 13s launch earlier in the year but while it was unveiled in the global markets an India launch date remained elusive. OnePlus has confirmed the specs for the Pad 3 but the pricing and exact sale date remains elusive for now. Click here to read the full report OpenAI has introduced a new AI agent called the 'ChatGPT agent', which integrates more deeply with the company's chatbot of the same name. The ChatGPT agent is a general-purpose agentic system that can take actions on a user's behalf. With the new ChatGPT agent, the chatbot can handle tasks such as accessing the user's calendar, shopping on their behalf, creating spreadsheets, and browsing the web to gather information. It can also automate repetitive tasks, such as converting screenshots or dashboards into presentations, planning and booking offsites, updating spreadsheets with new data, and more. OpenAI says the ChatGPT agent brings the best of both worlds from the Operator and DeepResearch agentic AI's, allowing ChatGPT agent to transition naturally from a simple conversation to executing actions within the same chat. Click here to read the full report Privacy focused search engine DuckDuckGo has brought a new feature that allows users to block AI generated images in their search results. However, the feature isn't enabled by default. Users will need to manually go into the search menu to change the filters if they want to reduce the number of AI-generated images they see. On the DuckDuckGo website, a new 'AI Images' option now appears in the search menu. By default, it is set to 'Show', but users can manually click on the menu and set it to 'Hide' to significantly reduce AI-generated images in search results. DuckDuckGo admits the feature won't catch every AI-generated image, but it says their frequency should drop significantly. To power the feature, DuckDuckGo relies on open-source blocklists like the 'nuclear' list from uBlockOrigin and the uBlacklist Huge AI Blacklist. Click here to read the full report Netflix has confirmed that it used generative AI for the first time to create a scene in one of its original shows. Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos described the technology as an 'incredible opportunity to help creators make films and series better, not just cheaper.' Sarandos said everyone involved with the project was 'thrilled' with the result generated by AI. Since generative AI gained prominence in late 2022, there has been significant anxiety across industries about its impact on jobs, with creative fields expected to be among the most affected. In 2023, a Hollywood actors and writers strike led to new guidelines around the use of AI in productions.
Yahoo
a day ago
- Business
- Yahoo
ChatGPT Now 'Thinks and Acts,' Company Claims in New Update: Here's What That Means for Users
NEED TO KNOW OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is announcing the release of ChatGPT agent, which uses its own computer to handle more detailed tasks "You can now ask ChatGPT to handle requests like 'look at my calendar and brief me on upcoming client meetings based on recent news,' " a representative for the company said in a statement The new tool will require manual oversight at certain points, including ahead of purchasesAs artificial intelligence proliferates exponentially, OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is announcing the release of ChatGPT agent, which uses its own computer to handle more detailed tasks. "ChatGPT now thinks and acts," read a company statement released on Thursday, July 17. "You can now ask ChatGPT to handle requests like 'look at my calendar and brief me on upcoming client meetings based on recent news,' 'plan and buy ingredients to make Japanese breakfast for four,' and 'analyze three competitors and create a slide deck,' " the statement continued. The tool, which requires manual oversight at certain points, could impact a large swath of users. In March, the company said 500 million people were using ChatGPT weekly. "Connectors allow ChatGPT to see information and do things like summarize your inbox for the day or find time slots you're available for a meeting—to take action on these sites, however, you'll still be prompted to log in by taking over the browser," the statement continued. "ChatGPT will intelligently navigate websites, filter results, prompt you to log in securely when needed, run code, conduct analysis, and even deliver editable slideshows and spreadsheets that summarize its findings," the company continued, adding, "As ChatGPT works, you can interrupt at any point to clarify your instructions, steer it toward desired outcomes, or change the task entirely." Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. But its ability to maneuver online comes with data privacy risks and the possibility of mistakes, which the company says it has taken steps to prevent. "ChatGPT is trained to explicitly ask for your permission before taking actions with real-world consequences, like making a purchase," their statement read. "Certain critical tasks, like sending emails, require your active oversight." "While ChatGPT agent is already a powerful tool for handling complex tasks, today's launch is just the beginning," the company continued. "We'll continue to iteratively add significant improvements regularly, making it more capable and useful to more people over time." The company, valued at $300 billion in March, said the model is currently available for Pro, Plus and Team users. Read the original article on People
Yahoo
a day ago
- Business
- Yahoo
ChatGPT Now 'Thinks and Acts,' Company Claims in New Update: Here's What That Means for Users
NEED TO KNOW OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is announcing the release of ChatGPT agent, which uses its own computer to handle more detailed tasks "You can now ask ChatGPT to handle requests like 'look at my calendar and brief me on upcoming client meetings based on recent news,' " a representative for the company said in a statement The new tool will require manual oversight at certain points, including ahead of purchasesAs artificial intelligence proliferates exponentially, OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, is announcing the release of ChatGPT agent, which uses its own computer to handle more detailed tasks. "ChatGPT now thinks and acts," read a company statement released on Thursday, July 17. "You can now ask ChatGPT to handle requests like 'look at my calendar and brief me on upcoming client meetings based on recent news,' 'plan and buy ingredients to make Japanese breakfast for four,' and 'analyze three competitors and create a slide deck,' " the statement continued. The tool, which requires manual oversight at certain points, could impact a large swath of users. In March, the company said 500 million people were using ChatGPT weekly. "Connectors allow ChatGPT to see information and do things like summarize your inbox for the day or find time slots you're available for a meeting—to take action on these sites, however, you'll still be prompted to log in by taking over the browser," the statement continued. "ChatGPT will intelligently navigate websites, filter results, prompt you to log in securely when needed, run code, conduct analysis, and even deliver editable slideshows and spreadsheets that summarize its findings," the company continued, adding, "As ChatGPT works, you can interrupt at any point to clarify your instructions, steer it toward desired outcomes, or change the task entirely." Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. But its ability to maneuver online comes with data privacy risks and the possibility of mistakes, which the company says it has taken steps to prevent. "ChatGPT is trained to explicitly ask for your permission before taking actions with real-world consequences, like making a purchase," their statement read. "Certain critical tasks, like sending emails, require your active oversight." "While ChatGPT agent is already a powerful tool for handling complex tasks, today's launch is just the beginning," the company continued. "We'll continue to iteratively add significant improvements regularly, making it more capable and useful to more people over time." The company, valued at $300 billion in March, said the model is currently available for Pro, Plus and Team users. Read the original article on People

Business Insider
a day ago
- Business
- Business Insider
This is how OpenAI COO Brad Lightcap defines AI agents
No one really agrees on what artificial general intelligence is, for instance. Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella recently called it "nonsensical benchmark hacking." There's also debate about what exactly an AI agent is. OpenAI Chief Operating Officer Brad Lightcap offered his thoughts on OpenAI's podcast this week. "It has to be a system that can be reliably handed complex work, that it can take on autonomously, and execute at a high level of proficiency, where it hasn't seen that work before," he said. The "hasn't seen"partis"critical," Lightcap added. On Thursday, OpenAI unveiled its latest contribution to the space: ChatGPT Agent. The new agent "can now do work for you using its own computer, handling complex tasks from start to finish," OpenAI said in its announcement. It combines the work of Operator to engage with websites, Deep Research to synthesize information, and ChatGPT's conversational ability, the company said. Companies are going all out to integrate agents into their work. Major tech firms from Intuit to Salesforce are rolling them out at light speed. Startups, too, are unveiling new agents. The race to adopt AI has left workers worried about whether they'll soon be replaced by a machine. However, at least in Lightcap's view, humans are necessary at every level. Agents aren't just entities that are "trained to copy," he said. They leverage their reasoning capacities to solve problems.