The Kremlin however denies any disparity. "It gives Beijing another tool, another instrument to influence Russia from domestically," he said. Temur Umarov, a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said Russia's economic stability "depends on China". "Russia has no other option" than to turn to China, he said. "Putin wants an even relationship with China, like with a twin brother, but it's not the case," analyst Timothy Ash told AFP. Time will tell if the alliance of convenience will turn into a long-term sustainable partnership. ![]() ![]() She said however most big Chinese companies that are well-integrated into Western markets opted to pause their activities in Russia for fear of potential sanctions. "It was necessary to find alternative sources of import as well, especially in machinery, electronics, various parts and components, automobiles and other vehicles," Kireeva told AFP. That was a view shared by Anna Kireeva, a research fellow at the prestigious MGIMO University in Russia. "Chinese companies took over the niches that were freed by Western companies that exited Russia," said Sergey Tsyplakov, an expert at the Moscow Higher School of Economics. "China and India have replaced the European Union as Russia's most important export market" for oil, said a group of economists from the Institute of International Finance.Īlong with Turkey, China and India accounted for two-thirds of Russia's crude oil exports in the fourth quarter last year. Ties between the two countries are particularly strong in the energy sector, which has been heavily targeted by Western sanctions. OpenAI didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Insider, made outside normal working hours.The two last met when Putin visited Beijing three weeks before launching his campaign in Ukraine. It is already being used by teachers to help generate lesson plans and quizzes for students. The OpenAI chief said on Tuesday that it can pass the bar exam for lawyers and is capable of scoring "a 5 on several AP exams". The latest version is capable of processing image prompts, is said to be more accurate than other versions, and users can have lengthier conversations with it. ![]() It's only available to users who pay for its Plus subscription. OpenAI this week unveiled GPT-4, its latest ChatGPT model, which Altman described as "less biased" and "more creative" than earlier versions. Altman expressed support for regulating AI in the tweets and said rules were "critical," and that society needed time to adjust to "something so big." The entrepreneur warned last month in a series of tweets that the world may not be "that far from potentially scary" artificial intelligence. Feedback could help curb any negative outcomes from its widespread use. The 37-year-old told ABC that he's in "regular contact" with government officials and said regulators and society should be involved with ChatGPT's rollout. "The reason to develop AI at all, in terms of impact on our lives and improving our lives and upside, this will be the greatest technology humanity has yet developed," he said. Altman also said artificial intelligence could replace many jobs, but that it could also lead to "much better ones".
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