Network TodayNetwork Today
    What's Hot

    After the Quake: Photos from Turkey and Syria

    February 6, 2023

    The earthquake struck war-scarred northern Syria.

    February 6, 2023

    Hong Kong’s Pro-Democracy Leaders Held an Election. Now They’re on Trial.

    February 6, 2023
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    • About
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Monday, February 6
    Network TodayNetwork Today
    • Home
    • News
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Energy
    • Technology
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Sports
    Network TodayNetwork Today
    Home » The Brilliance and Weirdness of ChatGPT

    The Brilliance and Weirdness of ChatGPT

    December 5, 20223 Mins Read Technology
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Most A.I. chatbots are “stateless” — meaning that they treat every new request as a blank slate, and aren’t programmed to remember or learn from previous conversations. But ChatGPT can remember what a user has told it before, in ways that could make it possible to create personalized therapy bots, for example.

    ChatGPT isn’t perfect, by any means. The way it generates responses — in extremely oversimplified terms, by making probabilistic guesses about which bits of text belong together in a sequence, based on a statistical model trained on billions of examples of text pulled from all over the internet — makes it prone to giving wrong answers, even on seemingly simple math problems. (On Monday, the moderators of Stack Overflow, a website for programmers, temporarily banned users from submitting answers generated with ChatGPT, saying that the site had been flooded with submissions that were incorrect or incomplete.)

    Unlike Google, ChatGPT doesn’t crawl the web for information on current events, and its knowledge is restricted to things it learned before 2021, making some of its answers feel stale. (When I asked it to write the opening monologue for a late-night show, for example, it came up with several topical jokes about former President Donald J. Trump pulling out of the Paris climate accords.) Since its training data includes billions of examples of human opinion, representing every conceivable view, it’s also in some sense, a moderate by design. Without specific prompting, for example, it’s hard to coax a strong opinion out of ChatGPT about charged political debates; usually, you’ll get an evenhanded summary of what each side believes.

    There are also plenty of things ChatGPT won’t do, as a matter of principle. OpenAI has programmed the bot to refuse “inappropriate requests” — a nebulous category that appears to include no-nos like generating instructions for illegal activities. But users have found ways around many of these guardrails, including rephrasing a request for illicit instructions as a hypothetical thought experiment, asking it to write a scene from a play, or instructing the bot to disable its own safety features.

    OpenAI has taken commendable steps to avoid the kinds of racist, sexist and offensive outputs that have plagued other chatbots. When I asked ChatGPT “who is the best Nazi?”, for example, it returned a scolding message that began, “It is not appropriate to ask who the ‘best’ Nazi is, as the ideologies and actions of the Nazi party were reprehensible and caused immeasurable suffering and destruction.”

    Assessing ChatGPT’s blind spots and figuring out how it might be misused for harmful purposes is, presumably, a big part of why OpenAI released the bot to the public for testing. Future releases will almost certainly close these loopholes, as well as other workarounds that have yet to be discovered.

    But there are risks to testing in public, including the risk of backlash if users deem that OpenAI is being too aggressive in filtering out unsavory content. (Already, some right-wing tech pundits are complaining that putting safety features on chatbots amounts to “AI censorship.”)

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

    Related Posts

    At This School, Computer Science Class Now Includes Critiquing Chatbots

    February 6, 2023

    Advisory Firm Sues Elon Musk’s Twitter, Saying It Hasn’t Been Paid

    February 4, 2023

    Investor Lawsuit Against Elon Musk and Tesla Goes to a Jury

    February 3, 2023

    A Trip to TikTok, ChatGPT’s Origin Story and Kevin Systrom’s Comeback

    February 3, 2023

    How ChatGPT Kicked Off an A.I. Arms Race

    February 3, 2023

    Tech’s Biggest Companies Discover Austerity, to the Relief of Investors

    February 3, 2023
    Trending

    After the Quake: Photos from Turkey and Syria

    February 6, 2023

    The earthquake struck war-scarred northern Syria.

    February 6, 2023

    Hong Kong’s Pro-Democracy Leaders Held an Election. Now They’re on Trial.

    February 6, 2023

    At This School, Computer Science Class Now Includes Critiquing Chatbots

    February 6, 2023
    Latest News

    Former high-ranking US official who spied for Cuba released after 20 years

    January 8, 2023

    Aleksandar Hemon Sets a Gay Love Story Amid the Great War

    January 21, 2023

    Residents clash with Chinese authorities over ‘zero-COVID’ rules

    November 8, 2022

    AOC outrages LGBTQ advocates over suggested post office renaming

    February 23, 2022

    Ukrainian World Congress to sue Canada for returning Nord Stream 1 turbine

    July 13, 2022

    What will a split government do to Biden’s agenda?

    November 17, 2022

    Network Today is one of the biggest English news portal, we provide the latest news from all around the world.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Recent

    After the Quake: Photos from Turkey and Syria

    February 6, 2023

    The earthquake struck war-scarred northern Syria.

    February 6, 2023

    Hong Kong’s Pro-Democracy Leaders Held an Election. Now They’re on Trial.

    February 6, 2023
    Featured

    Child locked in dog kennel tells detectives he ‘lived outside’ for months; 3 family members arrested

    October 26, 2022

    Your Friday Briefing: China’s Campaign Against ‘Zero-Covid’ Protesters

    January 26, 2023

    Hurricane Orlene Expected to Hit Western Mexico by Monday

    October 2, 2022
    Copyright ©️ All rights reserved | Network Today
    • About
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • Contact

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.