Unencrypted memory and political settings in new ChatGPT

Post Thumbnail

Sam Altman slightly revealed the secrets of GPT-6! The main revolution — memory. Imagine a chatbot that remembers all your preferences, habits and peculiarities. This is no longer just a tool — it’s a personal digital companion.

GPT-5 just came out, and Altman is already talking about the next version. And most interesting — the gap between releases will be shorter than between GPT-4 and GPT-5.

People want memory — so said Altman. People want product features that require understanding them as individuals. ChatGPT will remember who you are, your routines, your quirks. And adapt accordingly.

OpenAI is now working with psychologists, measuring users’ emotional state and tracking wellbeing over time. And this won’t just be technology. This will be mental health care through artificial intelligence.

Political neutrality is also a priority. Altman stated — the base model will be centrist, but users will be able to customize it to themselves. Want a super-progressive version — you’ll get it. Prefer conservative — please.

But there’s a problem. Temporary memory isn’t encrypted. Confidential information could be under threat. And Altman admitted — encryption could well be added, but there are no timelines yet. According to him, medical and legal queries require special protection that doesn’t exist today.

By Altman’s admission, models have already saturated the chat use case. They won’t become much better at dialogues. Maybe they’ll even become worse. But according to him, this isn’t failure. This is evolution. Artificial intelligence is transitioning from simple communication to deep understanding and adaptation.

I understand everything. But unencrypted memory, working with psychologists, tracking emotional state. Essentially, this is ready infrastructure for manipulation. And political customization will create filter bubbles worse than social media. I’d be happy to be wrong.

Почитать из последнего
UBTech will send Walker S2 robots to serve on China's border for $37 million
Chinese company UBTech won a contract for $37 million. And will send humanoid robots Walker S2 to serve on China's border with Vietnam. South China Morning Post reports that the robots will interact with tourists and staff, perform logistics operations, inspect cargo and patrol the area. And characteristically — they can independently change their battery.
Anthropic accidentally revealed an internal document about Claude's "soul"
Anthropic accidentally revealed the "soul" of artificial intelligence to a user. And this is not a metaphor. This is a quite specific internal document.
Jensen Huang ordered Nvidia employees to use AI everywhere
Jensen Huang announced total mobilization under the banner of artificial intelligence inside Nvidia. And this is no longer a recommendation. This is a requirement.
AI chatbots generate content that exacerbates eating disorders
A joint study by Stanford University and the Center for Democracy and Technology showed a disturbing picture. Chatbots with artificial intelligence pose a serious risk to people with eating disorders. Scientists warn that neural networks hand out harmful advice about diets. They suggest ways to hide the disorder and generate "inspiring weight loss content" that worsens the problem.
OpenAGI released the Lux model that overtakes Google and OpenAI
Startup OpenAGI released the Lux model for computer control and claims this is a breakthrough. According to benchmarks, the model overtakes analogues from Google, OpenAI and Anthropic by a whole generation. Moreover, it works faster. About 1 second per step instead of 3 seconds for competitors. And 10 times cheaper in cost per processing 1 token.