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ChatGPT spills its prompt (www.techradar.com)
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[-] mountainriver@awful.systems 18 points 3 days ago

Why is it art from artists who made their last work in 1912? Modern copyright lasts life plus X, where X has been increasing and is now mostly 70, though some stopped at 50. So why 1912? Did US copyright change that year?

[-] pop@lemmy.ml 9 points 3 days ago

Because these posts are nothing but the model making up something believable to the user. This "prompt engineering" is like asking a parrot who's learned quite a lot of words (but not their meaning), and then the self-proclaimed "pet whisperer" asks some random questions and the parrot, by coincidence makes up something cohesive. And he's like "I made the parrot spill the beans."

[-] sc_griffith@awful.systems 12 points 3 days ago

if it produces the same text as its response in multiple instances I think we can safely say it's the actual prompt

[-] corbin@awful.systems 6 points 2 days ago

Even better, we can say that it's the actual hard prompt: this is real text written by real OpenAI employees. GPTs are well-known to easily quote verbatim from their context, and OpenAI trains theirs to do it by teaching them to break down word problems into pieces which are manipulated and regurgitated. This is clownshoes prompt engineering done by manager-first principles like "not knowing what we want" and "being able to quickly change the behavior of our products with millions of customers in unpredictable ways".

[-] dgerard@awful.systems 10 points 3 days ago

yeah, the ChatGPT prompt seems to have spilt a few times, this is just the latest

this post was submitted on 05 Jul 2024
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