Industry Watcher’s Digest

Buzzworthy developments of the past few days.

  • The ChatGPT company is headed for a $1B payday. So reports The Information, which projects OpenAI’s revenues will top the B mark over the next 12 months. The Microsoft-cozy company is currently bringing in $80 million a month, so the forecast isn’t exactly pie in the sky. Fox Business notes that OpenAI had drawn a million or two subscribers to its $20/month subscription service as of March. And earlier this week it debuted ChatGPT Enterprise for businesses. The Information item is paywalled, but Fox Business’s free coverage is here.
     
  • Meanwhile, a fifth of the Internet’s most visited sites are barring crawler bots from scraping their data. That includes bots dispatched by the ChatGPTs of the world. ChatGPT has said it doesn’t mind, but if the trend spreads much further, it could frustrate the company’s vision to train its algorithms on data from everywhere. Originality.ai reports that ChatGPT blocking rose from 9% to 12% over just a one-week period in August. To this Axios adds: “Media outfits that feel they got taken by Google over the past two decades are eyeing the rapid commercialization of AI services like OpenAI with hostility and a ‘we won’t get fooled again’ attitude.”
     
  • Raising some tough questions about all of this are two Business Insider reporters. “How do you license the whole of the Internet?” they ask, more or less rhetorically. (Nobody seems to know the answer.) As Creative Commons CEO Catherine Stihler puts it, “So many issues keep cropping up: compensation, consent, credit. What does all of that look like with AI? … If we’re not careful, we’ll end up closing the [digital] commons.” It’s important reporting. Read the whole thing.
     
  • HCA Healthcare and Google Cloud are working to bring generative AI to hospitals at scale. The effort builds on a collaboration over digital transformation that the two began in 2021. The expanded arrangement will see them tapping generative AI to relieve clinicians of administrative tasks so they can pay more attention to patients. Announcement here, more on Google’s guiding vision for broad-scale healthcare AI here.
     
  • Inventors at MIT and the University of Galway (Ireland) have come up with an implantable gadget that purposefully combines AI with soft robotics. It’s designed to automatically morph, as needed, so as to avoid rejection by the patient’s unique anatomy or immune system. The creators see the device as a set-and-forget system for drug delivery aimed at sufferers of chronic conditions. The New York Post makes the advance sound like equal parts science and fun. (University news item here, peer-reviewed study here.)
     
  • Healthcare AI that narcs on patients as well as prescribers? Yes, it’s here. As a matter of fact, one company’s product sports a name its miffed human targets might have given it—NarxCare. The company behind the platform, Bamboo Health, tells Kaiser’s KFF Health News NarxCare shows providers their patient’s scores for overdose risk on a single screen. However, Bamboo points out, the tool “should never replace decisions made by physicians.” Article here.
     
  • Select vendor news straight from the sources:
     
  • From AIin.Healthcare’s news partners:
     

 

Dave Pearson

Dave P. has worked in journalism, marketing and public relations for more than 30 years, frequently concentrating on hospitals, healthcare technology and Catholic communications. He has also specialized in fundraising communications, ghostwriting for CEOs of local, national and global charities, nonprofits and foundations.