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ChatGPT users are grumbling that the popular chatbot has gotten lazier by refusing to complete some complex requests and its creator OpenAI is investigating the strange behavior.

Social media platforms such as X, Reddit and even OpenAIs developer forum are riddled with accounts that ChatGPT a large-language model trained on massive troves of internet data — is resisting labor-intensive prompts, such as requests to help the user write code and transcribe blocks of text.

The strange trend has emerged as Microsoft-backed OpenAI faces stiff competition from other firms pursuing generative artificial intelligence products, including Google, which recently released its own Gemini chatbot tool.

Late last month, X user and startup executive Matt Wensing posted screenshots of an exchange in which he asked ChatGPT to list all weeks between now and May 5th 2024.

The chatbot initially refused, claiming that it cant generate an exhaustive list of each individual week but eventually complied when Wensing insisted.

GPT has definitely gotten more resistant to doing tedious work, Wensing wrote on Nov. 27. Essentially giving you part of the answer and then telling you to do the rest.

In a second example, Wensing asked ChatGPT to generate a few dozen lines of code. Instead, the chatbot provided him a template and told him to follow this pattern to complete the task.

Another example where I asked it to extend some code.

It would have had to generate perhaps 50 lines.

It told me to do it instead. pic.twitter.com/MymTCrMSCZ

In another viral instance, ChatGPT refused a users request to transcribe text included in a photo from a page of a book.

ChatGPT officials confirmed last Thursday that they were examining the situation.

We’ve heard all your feedback about GPT4 getting lazier! we haven’t updated the model since Nov 11th, and this certainly isn’t intentional. model behavior can be unpredictable, and we’re looking into fixing it.

we've heard all your feedback about GPT4 getting lazier! we haven't updated the model since Nov 11th, and this certainly isn't intentional. model behavior can be unpredictable, and we're looking into fixing it ?

The company later clarified its point, stating the idea is not that the model has somehow changed itself since Nov 11th.

It’s just that differences in model behavior can be subtle — only a subset of prompts may be degraded, and it may take a long time for customers and employees to notice and fix these patterns, the company said.

ChatGPT and other chatbots have swelled in popularity since last year. However, experts have raised concerns about their tendency to hallucinate, or spit out false and inaccurate information, such as a recent incident in which ChatGPT and Googles Bard chatbot each falsely claimed that Israel and Hamas had reached a ceasefire agreement when no deal had occurred at the time.

A recent study performed by researchers at Long Island University found that ChatGPT incorrectly responded to some 75% of questions about prescription drug usage and gave some responses that would have caused harm to patients.

OpenAI has contended with internal turmoil following the surprise firing and rehiring of Sam Altman as its CEO. A report last week said senior OpenAI employees had raised concerns that Altman was psychologically abusive to staffers before his initial firing.

ChatGPT remains the most popular chatbot of its kind, reaching more than 100 million active weekly users as of November, according to Altman.

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NASA’s SPHEREx Telescope Delivers First Full-Sky Map, Unlocking Cosmic Secrets

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NASA’s SPHEREx telescope has completed its first all-sky map, revealing hundreds of millions of galaxies and providing data to study the universe’s origin, evolution, and distribution of life-essential elements across cosmic history.

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Robotic Arm Achieves 1,000 Tasks in a Day Through Innovative Imitation Learning

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A robotic arm mastered 1,000 manipulation tasks in one day using MT3 imitation learning, requiring only one demonstration per task and minimal data.

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‘Witch hunt’: Ex-EU commissioner Breton denounces U.S. visa ban targeting ‘censorship’

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'Witch hunt': Ex-EU commissioner Breton denounces U.S. visa ban targeting 'censorship'

A former EU commissioner has hit back after receiving a U.S. visa ban for alleged censorship.

The Trump administration imposed visa bans on Thierry Breton, a former European Union commissioner behind the Digital Services Act (DSA), and four anti-disinformation campaigners, accusing them of censoring U.S. social media platforms.

“The State Department is taking decisive action against five individuals who have led organized efforts to coerce American platforms to censor, demonetize, and suppress American viewpoints they oppose,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a statement.

He added that “these radical activists and weaponized NGOs have advanced censorship crackdowns by foreign states—in each case targeting American speakers and American companies.”

As such, their entry to the U.S. has “potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences,” he said.

“Based on these determinations, the Department has taken steps to impose visa restrictions on agents of the global censorship-industrial complex who, as a result, will be generally barred from entering the United States.”

Breton, who served as EU commissioner between 2019 and 2024, wrote on X: “As a reminder: 90% of the European Parliament — our democratically elected body — and all 27 Member States unanimously voted the DSA.”

“To our American friends: “Censorship isn’t where you think it is.””

President Trump expands travel ban

It comes as President Donald Trump continues to ramp up travel restrictions for foreign visitors and criticizes Europe.

Rubio did not identify who his department had taken action against, however Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy Sarah Rogers later did so on X.

Josephine Ballon, the co-leader of HateAid who serves on Germany’s Advisory Council of the Digital Services, was among those working on anti-disinformation campaigns to receive sanctions. Her co-leader Anna-Lena von Hodenberg was also affected. CNBC has reached out to Ballon and Von Hodenberg for comment.

The bans are part of efforts to enforce what Rogers refers to as a “red line” for the U.S. and the “extraterritorial censorship of Americans.”

In an interview with GB news on Dec. 4, Rogers took aim at the U.K.’s Online Safety Act (OSA), saying the law was being applied extraterritorially, accounting for U.S. citizens’ speech about U.S. politics on U.S.-based platforms.

Europe’s DSA and the U.K.’s OSA are among only a handful of pieces of legislation designed to keep the power of Big Tech in check and improve safety for children online.

The DSA forces tech giants like Google and Meta to police illegal content more aggressively, or face hefty fines, while the OSA law requires age verification on adult sites and a number of other platforms.

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