AI News Deep Dive with Elephas

OpenAI and FDA Discussing AI Use for Faster Drug Approvals

12 min · 11 de may de 2025
Portada del episodio OpenAI and FDA Discussing AI Use for Faster Drug Approvals

Descripción

The world of medicine might be on the brink of a major change. OpenAI, the company that created ChatGPT, is now talking with the FDA about using artificial intelligence to speed up how new medicines get approved.  These discussions could transform a process that currently takes over 10 years into something much faster. Imagine new treatments for diseases reaching patients months earlier because AI helped review the mountains of data that normally slow things down. While this technology brings hope, it also raises important questions about safety and reliability.  In this article, we'll explore what's happening between OpenAI and the FDA, why drug approvals take so long now, how AI might change things, what concerns experts have, and what other companies are doing in this exciting space. Let's get into it.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de AI News Deep Dive with Elephas!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

21 episodios

episode Google I/O 2025: Complete Guide to Major AI Announcements artwork

Google I/O 2025: Complete Guide to Major AI Announcements

Google just changed everything about how we use computers and phones. The company spent two hours showing off new AI tools that will make your daily tasks much easier. Instead of typing and clicking through websites, you can now talk to your devices and get things done faster. The search engine you use every day is getting completely rebuilt. Your email will start writing itself. Video calls will translate languages instantly. Creating videos and images that used to need expensive software can now happen with just a few words. Most of these changes are happening right now or will arrive in the next few months. Some features cost money, but many of the best ones are free. Let’s cover major Google announcements and how each change affects what you do online every day.

25 de may de 202515 min
episode OpenAI and FDA Discussing AI Use for Faster Drug Approvals artwork

OpenAI and FDA Discussing AI Use for Faster Drug Approvals

The world of medicine might be on the brink of a major change. OpenAI, the company that created ChatGPT, is now talking with the FDA about using artificial intelligence to speed up how new medicines get approved.  These discussions could transform a process that currently takes over 10 years into something much faster. Imagine new treatments for diseases reaching patients months earlier because AI helped review the mountains of data that normally slow things down. While this technology brings hope, it also raises important questions about safety and reliability.  In this article, we'll explore what's happening between OpenAI and the FDA, why drug approvals take so long now, how AI might change things, what concerns experts have, and what other companies are doing in this exciting space. Let's get into it.

11 de may de 202512 min
episode ChatGPT Can Now Find Locations From Your Photos artwork

ChatGPT Can Now Find Locations From Your Photos

AI technology just took another big step forward, and it's raising both excitement and concern. ChatGPT, the popular AI chatbot, has developed an impressive new skill: it can look at your photos and figure out where they were taken, often with surprising accuracy. This ability doesn't even require the hidden data(meta data) usually stored in photos - it can identify locations just by studying what's in the picture itself. As this trend spreads across social media, users are testing ChatGPT's limits by challenging it with increasingly difficult images. But this development also raises important questions about privacy, data protection, and the future of AI technology. How accurate is this feature really? Should we be worried about our privacy? And what does this tell us about where AI development is heading? Let's get into it.

27 de abr de 202511 min