The company also brought together engineers for LinkedIn’s largest-ever internal Hackathon, featuring thousands of participants. The tool allows engineers to explore LinkedIn data with advanced generative AI models from OpenAI and other sources. In April, LinkedIn’s head of data and AI, Ya Xu, told VentureBeat about the company’s Generative AI Playground, an internal developer sandbox. LinkedIn speeds up development with internal sandbox Last month, Meta announced an AI “ testing playground” for a small group of advertisers to use as they try out new generative AI-powered ad tools including text variation, background generation and image outcropping. In addition, he highlighted an Agents Playground, an experimental internal-only interface powered by LLaMA where users “can have conversations with AI agents and provide feedback to help us improve our systems.” The Meta news comes on the heels of an internal all-hands meeting last week in which CEO Mark Zuckerberg said Meta is building generative AI into all of its products, including LLM-powered AI agents with unique personas and skill sets that help and entertain people. According to the report, Meta is “starting to roll it out internally to a small group now” to experiment in summarizing meetings, writing code and debugging features. The chatbot allows employees to create their own prompts and share them with colleagues. The Verge reported this weekend that Meta has built an internal AI chatbot called Metamate that uses internal company data. It also emphasized that the tool is only for experimentation and work purposes that its results have not been validated as accurate and “should be validated before being internally shared or used to help make business decisions.” Meta employees get access to internal chatbot The screen welcoming associates to Walmart’s Generative AI Playground says that employees “learn best from trial an error” and that the tool is a “safe way to try how GenAI can be used without risk of data leakage or exposure” and a place associates can use “more realistic prompts for their job function.” The announcement, made last week in a LinkedIn post by Cheryl Ainoa, EVP of new businesses and emerging technology at Walmart Global Tech, says, “there will be various GenAI models available to try out all in one place…enabling our associates to see the difference in how each model reacts to the same prompts.”
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