Last month, OpenAI unveiled an ambitious new language model capable of working through challenging problems with a simulated kind of step-by-step reasoning. OpenAI says the approach could be crucial for building more capable AI systems in the future.
In the meantime, perhaps a more modest version of this technology could help make AI girlfriends and boyfriends a bit more spontaneous and alluring.
That’s what Dippy, a startup that offers “uncensored” AI companions is betting. The company recently launched a feature that lets users see the reasoning behind their AI characters’ responses.
Dippy runs its own large language model, which is an open source offering fine-tuned using role-play data, which the company says makes it better at improvising when a user steers a conversation in a particular direction.
Akshat Jagga, Dippy’s CEO, says that adding an additional layer of simulated “thinking”—using what’s known as “chain-of-thought prompting”—can elicit more interesting and surprising responses, too. “A lot of people are using it,” Jagga says. “Usually, when you chat with an LLM, it sort of just gives you a knee-jerk reaction.”
With little promotion, Dippy has amassed 500,000 monthly and 50,000 daily active users, Jagga says, with people spending, on average, an hour on the app at a time. “That engagement was absolutely insane for us,” he says.
Dippy revealed that it has secured $2.1 million in “pre-seed” funding in a round led by Drive Capital.
Dippy is of course entering an already bustling market that includes well-known companies like Character.AI and Replika as well as a host of other AI girlfriend apps. A recent report from investment firm Andreessen Horowitz shows that the top 100 generative AI tools based on usage include many AI companions; the chart on engagement among users of such apps shows how much stickier they are than just about anything else out there.
While these apps are often associated with undersocialized young men, they cater to women too. Jagga says that 70 percent of Dippy’s accounts tend to favor male characters, which could mean that many users identify as female.
Source : Wired