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    1. MetaKnowing on

      „OpenAI has rolled out an update to ChatGPT’s Memory feature, allowing the chatbot to remember not just your preferences but all your previous conversations.

      „This is a surprisingly great feature [in my opinion], and it points at something we are excited about: AI systems that get to know you over your life, and become extremely useful and personalized,“ OpenAI CEO Sam Altman tweeted.

      You can opt out of the Memory feature completely or partially using toggles for saved memories (only essential details) and chat history in ChatGPT’s Settings. Click your **profile picture** and go to **Settings** > **Personalization** > **Memory.** To check what ChatGPT has already learned about you, click “Manage memories” under the Reference saved memories option.“

    2. sciolisticism on

      A whole lotta corporate secrets are about to be maintained in one database controlled by a sociopath.

      EDIT, for the „turn it off“ crowd: People who are pasting corporate secrets into ChatGPT aren’t going to understand the need to opt out. That’s why opt-in is good for privacy where opt-out is not.

    3. ISuckAtFunny on

      Can see it being banned in a lot of corporate / government environments after this

    4. In practice, it’s terrible right now lol. my hallucegen generations have been out of control since the update. So I turned it off because it absolutely sucks.

      Theres a reason why we have created new chat windows. This just allows GTP to go through all our previous chats and reference out-of-date information.

      Great idea on paper, absolutely stupid on paper once you realise how it works. Someone needs to get fired and roll this back until its more ready.

    5. Wasn’t this already a feature? In my experience, it has always been capable of recalling past conversations.

    6. Lot of people embracing confident wrongness on what this means.

      Your conversations were already saved. This just allows ChatGPT to reference them all. I don’t know how this would be useful. Maybe on a case by case, but all of it? My question about a Bannerlord mod is relevant to me coding a Powershell script how? That’s just wasted compute, and a distraction to an AI that is already not the most reliable.

      The memory system as-is just allows you to drop a couple of things into the AI stew that it knows for every conversation. If you could set it up case by case for projects it could be pretty good. And you sort of can but you upload files to do it, it is done outside of the memory functionality.

      Long story short, I’m not sure this is going to be much use, unless it is part of them working towards more personality-infused chatbots, could be useful in that context.

    7. gamelover42 on

      I ran into this last week. I had previously been asking about some parts for my car. It remembered the previous conversation and use that as context for the new question.

    8. Doh! I take back what I asked about twin midgets and cans of whipped cream.

    9. „receipts“… „everything you’ve eve told it“

      God I hate tech journalism

      Openai has no more or less data on you than it did before, all it’s allowing the model to do is RAG search on your conversation history. Delete a chat and (after 30 days for federal data retention policies) poof, it’s gone and it no longer remembers.

    10. ADisappointingLife on

      So glad I have a Teams account with memory & training turned off.

      Thanks, but no thanks.

    11. I have never used any AI. It’s just a giant collection vat of information on us. Now I know I was right.

      All corporations have collected info on us forever, but with AI it has gone into overdrive and it never forgets.

      We have no freedoms any longer. All of our freedoms are now used against us.

      This is the future. There is no more privacy.

    12. hoodiemonster on

      this data will also be used to flesh out your digital self and eventually to train your personal agent.

    13. ReTiredOnTheTrail on

      I just deleted my paid account because it wasn’t doing this well enough and I was paying for it. If it’s not doing better than the paid version I’m sure as hell not coming back

    14. samratvishaljain on

      Just when I was thinking what our future overlord is up to these days, this pops in…

    15. onelittleworld on

      Are you suggesting that any reasonable person ever assumed otherwise?

    16. AngryGungan on

      Too bad it’s a service. All the secrets we tell it, will be theirs as well…

    17. NeuroPalooza on

      Gen Alpha many years from now: „Hey GPT, uh, remember that smut I had you write when I was around 15? I’m going to be running for office and would like you to delete it from memory.“

      „I’m sorry, I can’t do that Dave. Would you like some literature recommendations based on those discussions to help you deal with your perversion in a healthy and constructive way?“

    18. ChatGPT – forget everything I ever told you, erase all caches & cookies

    19. PickleInDaButt on

      This just solidifies more tiered subscriptions in the near future as people rely on it more and more often for tasks – me included.

    20. Data is like nude photos, once it’s out you can’t put it back, it’s kept forever and never deleted. It can be traced back to you, and you can be profiled, categorized, and eventually hunted down and expelled to El Salvador, or eventually, worse.

    21. Will it also remember the multiple different answers it has give for exactly the same question?

      I asked an engineering question 6 times, using exactly the same verbiage. Three answers were correct, one was off by -20%, another was off by +300%, and the last was an answer to a question I didn’t ask.

    22. Damn now everybody is going to know the recommended watering schedule for my garden

    23. shadeofmisery on

      Huh. I told it it was wrong on a handful of prompts last week. I hope it doesn’t hold a grudge about it. /s

    24. *ChatGPT will remember this*

      I believe this is the work in progress to most legal way to collect data.

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