The Centre for Food Safety, Hong Kong has published the list of banned Indian spice variants on its website
Samsung Electronics is banning employees in its mobile and appliances division from using generative AI services such as ChatGPT, the company said on Tuesday, after instances of "misuse" of the technology.
Interest in artificial intelligence chatbots has soared since the Microsoft-backed ChatGPT debuted in November.
ChatGPT caused a global sensation for generating essays, songs, exams and even news articles from brief prompts. Critics have fretted over how ChatGPT and its competitors collect and process data.
Major financial firms, including Goldman Sachs, have banned or restricted employees' use of ChatGPT-like platforms in recent months.
South Korea's Samsung Electronics, one of the world's largest makers of memory chips and smartphones, has now joined that list.
The ban applies to staff in the mobile and appliances division, a Samsung representative told AFP.
An internal memo obtained by AFP says Samsung is working to find ways to use generative AI services in a "security safe environment for employees so that work efficiency and convenience can be enhanced".
"... until these measures are prepared, we are banning the use of generative AI services for company-owned computers temporarily," it said.
The memo from the Suwon-based firm also advises staff to refrain from uploading work-related information to such platforms when logging in on personal computers outside company premises.
It says there have been "instances of misuse" of ChatGPT-like features by Samsung employees, without giving details.
More than 60 per cent of Samsung staff said in an internal survey there were security risks with using generative AI platforms with company devices, according to the memo.
The Centre for Food Safety, Hong Kong has published the list of banned Indian spice variants on its website
Regulations lag pace of climate change. Air pollution kills 860,000 people each year
The two Muslim neighbours were involved in unprecedented tit-for-tat military strikes this year
Attacks online include insults, sexist and sexual comments, and physical threats, including death threats to journalists and their families
AI tools imitating human intelligence are widely used in newsrooms around the world to transcribe sound files, summarise texts and translate
Of these, 90 families, or 468 people, returned over the Torkham crossing, according to the Taliban-led Ministry of Refugees and Repatriation
It allows American spy agencies to surveil foreigners abroad using data drawn from US digital infrastructure such as internet service providers
The incident happened shortly after jury selection for the hush-money trial was completed