The GPT-5 rollout has been a big mess(arstechnica.com)
arstechnica.com
The GPT-5 rollout has been a big mess
https://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2025/08/the-gpt-5-rollout-has-been-a-big-mess/
11 comments
Reading some of those comments was eye opening. There are a lot of people who have a deeply unhealthy attachment to ChatGPT. I still think that the idea of AI safety (because it might become Skynet or whatever) is bogus, but it seems clear to me that we as a society need to do something about these unhealthy attachments people are forming. It's genuinely very bad.
Agreed, but surely part of the solution is getting the companies that build AI and the 'journalists' that cover it and its enthusiasts to stop pitching it as a cure for loneliness and/or a substitute for therapy.
The fundamental problem with 'AI safety' as a concept was that it was far too focused on 'what if a sci-fi thing happens?' vs 'how will people actually interact with these and what will go wrong?'
Especially when they are making money exacerbating them! Yum yum boot shine.
> During Friday's AMA, Altman admitted the routing system that automatically selected which AI model to use had malfunctioned on launch day. "Yesterday, the autoswitcher broke and was out of commission for a chunk of the day, and the result was GPT-5 seemed way dumber," he wrote.
I mentioned it here previously, but I am inclined to distrust the veracity of this defense and view it as a good scapegoat for why the default performance sucked. I'd be more likely to believe that it was intentionally neutered (purposely using weaker models more often, heavily quantized, whatever) to reduce costs or whatever other reason you can think of and this "the autorouter was completely broken and we totally didn't notice for weeks on end" is just damage control (I don't think sama has earned any level of "just trust me, bro" credit).
I mentioned it here previously, but I am inclined to distrust the veracity of this defense and view it as a good scapegoat for why the default performance sucked. I'd be more likely to believe that it was intentionally neutered (purposely using weaker models more often, heavily quantized, whatever) to reduce costs or whatever other reason you can think of and this "the autorouter was completely broken and we totally didn't notice for weeks on end" is just damage control (I don't think sama has earned any level of "just trust me, bro" credit).
> the autorouter was completely broken and we totally didn't notice for weeks on end
Weeks on end? GPT5 only been around for 4 days. Problems during launches happen.It was available under NDA for many enterprise customers and heavy users.
Yeah, and the high launch volume which didn’t occur previously was almost certainly the cause of or a major contributor to the problem.
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I quite like it
It's a bit much to expect a company to be responsible for every individual's self-prescribed mental health demands.