Why is ChatGPT referring to "hidden user memory"?(aiweekly.co)
aiweekly.co
Why is ChatGPT referring to "hidden user memory"?
https://aiweekly.co/alerts/openai-deploys-silent-memory-pre-flight-in-chatgpt
5 comments
OpenAI apparently launched "Silent Memory Preflight", which functions as an internal self-audit of "hidden user memories" including an undisclosed knowledge memories layer[1].
[1] https://aiweekly.co/alerts/openai-deploys-silent-memory-pre-...
[1] https://aiweekly.co/alerts/openai-deploys-silent-memory-pre-...
Yes you are citing my link... which is pure speculation. Do you have anything to actually add?
> "Yes you are citing my link... "
Wasn't sure you actually read the information in that link.
> "which is pure speculation."
Is it?
> "Do you have anything to actually add?"
Given your temperament, no.
Wasn't sure you actually read the information in that link.
> "which is pure speculation."
Is it?
> "Do you have anything to actually add?"
Given your temperament, no.
A typical answer then followed. Users on Reddit report the behaviour as well (https://old.reddit.com/r/ChatGPT/comments/1traouv/why_is_it_...), and the linked article suggests this is new.
The thing is, I have memory disabled. So is this an internal prompt just being exposed ("Does the user have any memories that are relevant? No, [because they don't have any].") or does it mean they are in fact keeping hidden memories / context and using these to inform responses, but didn't find anything relevant for this particular question?
While I suspect the former, the possibility of the latter concerns me somewhat.