Forbes October 15, 2024
Richard Nieva

Thanks to the popularity of ChatGPT, companies everywhere are injecting generative AI into their products. But Vikram Chatterji thinks there’s one big thing stopping businesses from fully embracing AI, and deploying tools in full-scale production: Companies don’t really know how well the tools are going to work once they’re released.

“If you don’t solve for this, you’re stuck in almost-production land,” said Chatterji, CEO of Galileo, a startup focused on evaluating AI models.

Chatterji wants his company to be the one to solve it. Galileo works with customers including Hewlett Packard, Comcast and Twilio to test their AI tools, making sure they are not hallucinating — AI-speak for just making up responses — or giving out private data. On Tuesday,...

Today's Sponsors

Venturous
Got healthcare questions? Just ask Transcarent

Today's Sponsor

Venturous

 
Topics: AI (Artificial Intelligence), Investments, Technology, Trends
How AI is revolutionizing cardiology in underserved communities
Smart Healthcare: Merging Minds And Machines
Visualized: The Top Uses of AI in Digital Twins
Salesforce launches Agentforce 2dx, letting AI run autonomously across enterprise systems
Fortifying The Future: Building AI Security On A Solid Foundation

Share This Article