HomeNewsOpinionThe human perils of giving ChatGPT more memory

The human perils of giving ChatGPT more memory

OpenAI mustn't repeat Facebook's mistake of "remembering" user preferences and views and feeding more of the same, ultimately driving them into silos. It must offer diverse perspectives on political or social issues, even if they challenge a user’s prejudices

February 15, 2024 / 09:46 IST
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ChatGPT
ChatGPT has experienced gangbusters growth, pushed for user engagement and is now storing personal information.

OpenAI is rolling out what it calls a memory feature in ChatGPT. The popular chatbot will be able to store key details about its users to make
answers more personalised and “more helpful,” according to OpenAI. These can be facts about your family or health, or preferences about how you want ChatGPT to talk to you so that instead of starting on a blank page it’s armed with useful context. As with so many tech innovations, what sounds cutting
-edge and useful also has a dark flipside: It could blast another hole into our digital privacy and — just maybe — push us further into the echo chambers that social media forged.

AI firms have been chasing new ways of increasing chatbot “memory”for years to make their bots more useful. They’re also following a roadmap that worked for Facebook, gleaning personal information to better target users with content to keep them scrolling.

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OpenAI’s new feature — which is rolling out to both paying subscribers and free users — could also make its customers more engaged, benefiting the business. At the moment, ChatGPT’s users spend an average of seven-and-a-half minutes per visit on the service, according to market research firm SimilarWeb. That makes it one of the stickiest AI services available, but the metric could go higher. Time spent on YouTube, for instance, is 20 minutes
for each visit. By processing and retaining more private information, OpenAI could boost those stickiness numbers, and stay ahead of competing chatbots from Microsoft, Anthropic, and Perplexity.

But there are worrying side effects. OpenAI states that users will be “in control of ChatGPT’s memory,” but also that the bot can “pick up details itself.” In other words, ChatGPT could choose to remember certain facts that it deems important. Customers can go into ChatGPT’s settings menu and turn off whatever they want the chatbot to forget, or shut down
the memory feature entirely. “Memory” will be on by default, putting the onus on users to turn things off.