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Sam Altman Watches Awkwardly As He’s Shown Bizarre ChatGPT Issue: “Uh, Maybe, Uhhh…”

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Why This Matters

This incident highlights ongoing challenges with AI reliability and transparency, emphasizing the need for better safeguards and clear communication from developers like OpenAI. It underscores the importance for consumers and the industry to remain vigilant about AI flaws that can impact trust and safety. Addressing these issues is crucial for responsible AI deployment and user confidence in future innovations.

Key Takeaways

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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman reacted awkwardly to a viral video of a ChatGPT issue.

In the video, the TikTok creator known as Husk asks ChatGPT’s voice mode to start a timer for his mile run. When Husk tells it to stop the timer only seconds later, the AI claims he took over ten minutes — and then confidently insists that it’s Husk, not itself, that’s mistaken.

Altman’s reaction will raise eyebrows. After being shown the clip during an interview on the Mostly Human podcast, he laughed soundlessly for a few seconds too long, as if to hide his speechlessness, stumped for a convincing response. “Uh, maybe, uhhh,” he begins.

When the host Laurie Segall asked if he needed to show the issue to his product team, Altman swatted it down by saying it was a “known issue.”

“Maybe another year,” Altman said, estimating how long it would take to fix. “Something like that.”

“That voice model doesn’t have the tools to, like, start a timer or anything like that,” he explained. “But we will add the intelligence into the voice models.”

OpenAI CEO Reacts to Viral ChatGPT Video

The strained response and Altman’s vague promises — what does we’ll “add the intelligence” mean for an AI company? — raise the question of whether Altman or anyone else at OpenAI is prepared to address their tech’s often serious lingering flaws. Often, the people building these systems can hide behind a PR team or choose to stay silent on wide-ranging issues, including persistent hallucinations, and the chatbots encouraging teens towards eating disorders and suicide.

And arguably, Altman doesn’t address the biggest issue in the viral clip: that ChatGPT essentially tries to gaslight the user. In Husk’s video, the confident-sounding AI consistently uses slippery turns of phrase to convince Husk that its response is in no way fallible, in a classic example of how large language models affect an authoritative tone, even when they have no idea what they’re talking about.

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