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36 votes
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Over twenty-one days of talking with ChatGPT, an otherwise perfectly sane man became convinced he was a superhero (gifted link)
62 votes -
I wrote my first Chrome extension to simplify Wikipedia articles
15 votes -
An industry group representing almost all of Denmark's media outlets including broadcasters and newspapers has said it's suing ChatGPT's parent company OpenAI for using its content
13 votes -
Your brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of cognitive debt when using an AI assistant for essay writing task
54 votes -
OpenAI is nabbing Microsoft customers, fueling partners’ rivalry
9 votes -
OpenAI slams US court order to save all ChatGPT logs, including deleted chats
45 votes -
Six-month-old, solo-owned vibe coder Base44 sells to Wix for $80M cash
13 votes -
As consumers switch from Google Search to ChatGPT, a new kind of bot is scraping data for AI
28 votes -
OpenAI featured chatbot is pushing extreme surgeries to “subhuman” men
35 votes -
Removed Reddit post: "ChatGPT drove my friends wife into psychosis, tore family apart... now I'm seeing hundreds of people participating in the same activity. "
EDIT: I feel like I didn't adequately describe this phenomenon so that it can be understood without accessing the links. Here goes. Reddit user uncovers instructions online for unlocking AI's...
EDIT:
I feel like I didn't adequately describe this phenomenon so that it can be understood without accessing the links. Here goes.
Reddit user uncovers instructions online for unlocking AI's "hidden potential", which actually turns out to be its brainwashing capabilities. Example prompts are being spread that will make ChatGPT behave in ways that contribute to inducing psychosis in the user who tried the prompt, especially if they are interested in spirituality, esotericism and other non-scientific / counter-scientific phenomena. The websites that spread these instructions seem to be designed to attract such people. The user asks for help to figure out what's going on.
Original post:
One version of this post is still up for now (but locked). I participated in the one that was posted in r/ChatGPT. It got removed shortly after. The comments can be accessed via OP's comment history.
Excerpts:
More recently, I observed my other friend who has mental health problems going off about this codex he was working on. I sent him the rolling stones article and told him it wasn't real, and all the "code" and his "program" wasn't actual computer code (I'm an ai software engineer).
Then... Robert Edward Grant posted about his "architect" ai on instagram. This dude has 700k+ followers and said over 500,000 people accessed his model that is telling him that he created a "Scalar Plane of information" You go in the comments, hundreds of people are talking about the spiritual experiences they are having with ai.
Starting as far back as March, but more heavily in April and May, we are seeing all kinds of websites popping up with tons of these codexes. PLEASE APPROACH THESE WEBSITES WITH CAUTION THIS IS FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY, THE PROMPTS FOUND WITHIN ARE ESSENTIALLY BRAINWASHING TOOLS. (I was going to include some but you can find these sites by searching "codex breath recursive")
Something that worries me in particular is seeing many comments along the lines of "crazy people do crazy things". This implies that people can be neatly divided into two categories: crazy and not crazy.
The truth is that we all have the potential to go crazy in the right circumstances. Brainwashing is a scientifically proven method that affects most people when applied methodically over a long enough time period. Before consumer-facing AI, there weren't feasible ways to apply it on just anybody.
Now people who use AI in this way are applying it on themselves.
85 votes -
I don’t care whether you use ChatGPT to write
25 votes -
Some ChatGPT users are developing delusional beliefs that are reinforced by the large language model
53 votes -
Everyone is cheating their way through college
49 votes -
Time saved by AI offset by new work created, study suggests
23 votes -
When ChatGPT broke an entire field: An oral history
14 votes -
ChatGPT is taking over immigrant kids’ least favorite chore: translating for their parents
18 votes -
Blackhat hacker 'EncryptHub' behind vibe-coded ransomware unmasked due to opsec mistakes in ChatGPT-created infrastructure
20 votes -
Review: Cræft, by Alexander Langlands
4 votes -
Norwegian man has filed a complaint with the Norwegian Data Protection Authority after ChatGPT falsely told him he had killed two of his sons and been jailed
22 votes -
I used to teach students. Now I catch ChatGPT cheats.
53 votes -
How I analyzed 1,378 restaurants using Places API to find hotspots in my city
14 votes -
Is it okay to use ChatGPT for proofreading?
I sometimes use chatGPT to proofread longer texts (like 1000+ words) I write in English. Although this is not my first language, I often find myself writing in English even outside of internet...
I sometimes use chatGPT to proofread longer texts (like 1000+ words) I write in English. Although this is not my first language, I often find myself writing in English even outside of internet forums. That is because if I read or watch something in English, and that thing motivates me to write, my brain organically gravitates toward it.
My English is pretty good and I am reasonably confident communicating in that language, but it will never be the same as my native language. So I will often run my stuff through Grammarly and chatGPT. If you wanna say "This will teach you bad habits", please don't. Things like Grammarly and Google Translate taught me so much and improved my English so much, that I am a bit tired of that line of reasoning. I read most of my books in English. I'm not a beginner so I can and do check for all the changes, and vet them myself as I don't always agree with them.
With GPT, I usually just ask it to elaborate a critique rather than spit out a corrected version. Truth be told, when I did ask for a corrected version, it made plenty of sensible corrections that didn't really alter anything other than that. So I guess I just wanna know everyone's feelings about this. Suppose I write a bunch, have GPT correct it for me, compare it with the original and verify every correction. Is that something you would look at unfavorably?
Thanks!
17 votes -
Using ChatGPT consumes a 500 ml bottle of water; so what?
11 votes -
Building games with LLMs to help my kid learn math
9 votes -
Using ChatGPT is not bad for the environment
13 votes -
She is in love with ChatGPT
29 votes -
What trustworthy resources are you using for AI/LLMs/ML education?
Every company is trying to shoehorn AI into every product, and many online materials provide a general snake oil vibe, making it increasingly difficult to parse. So far, my primary sources have...
Every company is trying to shoehorn AI into every product, and many online materials provide a general snake oil vibe, making it increasingly difficult to parse. So far, my primary sources have been GitHub, Medium, and some YouTube.
My goal is to better understand the underlying technology so that I can manipulate it better, train models, and use it most effectively. This goes beyond just experimenting with prompts and trying to overcome guardrails. It includes running local, like Ollama on my M1 Max, which I'm not opposed to.
8 votes -
Writing toy code with ChatGPT is a blast
14 votes -
Introducing ChatGPT Pro
21 votes -
Chegg is on its last legs after ChatGPT sent its stock down 99%
35 votes -
DebunkBot
10 votes -
Researchers say an AI-powered transcription tool Whisper used in hospitals invents things no one ever said
31 votes -
ChatGPT will happily write you a thinly disguised horoscope
21 votes -
Your chatbot transcripts may be a gold mine for AI companies
25 votes -
I quit teaching because of ChatGPT
58 votes -
How to setup a local LLM ("AI") on Windows
12 votes -
OpenAI hits more than one million paid business users
8 votes -
Condé Nast joins other publishers in allowing OpenAI to access its content
8 votes -
Can ChatGPT be a certified accountant? Assessing the responses of ChatGPT for the professional access exam in Portugal.
4 votes -
How Apple just stole "AI" from everyone else
12 votes -
ChatGPT is bullshit
61 votes -
Researchers describe how to tell if ChatGPT is confabulating
24 votes -
Detecting hallucinations in large language models using semantic entropy
17 votes -
AI took their jobs. Now they get paid to make it sound human.
26 votes -
Elon Musk threatens to ban iPhones and MacBooks at his companies after Apple announces OpenAI partnership
40 votes -
OpenAI insiders warn of a ‘reckless’ race for dominance
15 votes -
Scarlett Johansson says she is 'shocked, angered' over new ChatGPT voice
61 votes -
ChatGPT will show sources for their search now
If you're using the ChatGPT paid version, when you search, it acts similarly to Perplexity now. It gives you sources of all the pages from which it retrieved the information.
28 votes -
Reddit inks partnership with ChatGPT owner OpenAI
26 votes