
"Altman told employees in an internal memo Monday they should focus on upgrading the AI chatbot's speed, reliability and ability to answer more questions while also allowing users to better personalize their experiences, according to The Wall Street Journal and news site the Information. OpenAI will delay other planned initiatives, such as a rollout of more advertising on the chatbot and specific versions for health and shopping, while prioritizing ChatGPT's improvement, the memo stated."
"The memo is the clearest sign to date that OpenAI is feeling the heat from Google, which rolled out an upgraded version of its Gemini AI model to strong reviews last month. Gemini 3 leapfrogged ChatGPT and other top chatbots in benchmark tests meant to measure their capabilities. Meanwhile, OpenAI's hundreds of billions of dollars in planned spending on AI data centers and other infrastructure have helped fuel fears on Wall Street about a possible bubble - with investors concerned that revenue justifying the spending has yet to materialize."
"The firm expects an eye-popping operating loss of $74 billion this year and would need to hit $200 billion in annual revenue to turn a profit by 2030, according to internal projections cited by The Journal. Aside from its work to improve ChatGPT, OpenAI is reportedly working on a new AI model codenamed "Garlic," the Information reported. OpenAI chief research officer Mark Chen reportedly told some colleagues that the model was "performing well" compared to"
Sam Altman declared a "code red" and directed employees to prioritize improving ChatGPT's speed, reliability, question-answering, and personalization. Planned initiatives such as increased advertising and specialized health and shopping versions will be delayed while staff are temporarily reassigned to prioritize the chatbot. Competitive pressure intensified after Google released Gemini 3, which outperformed ChatGPT in benchmark tests. Large planned infrastructure spending has raised investor concerns about a possible bubble. Internal projections forecast a $74 billion operating loss this year and indicate a need for $200 billion in annual revenue to reach profitability by 2030. Development on a new model codenamed "Garlic" continues with internal reports of positive performance.
Read at New York Post
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