{"id":3869,"date":"2024-04-11T17:07:24","date_gmt":"2024-04-11T17:07:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aitesonics.com\/chatgpt-says-that-asking-it-to-repeat-words-forever-is-a-violation-of-its-terms-202622018\/"},"modified":"2024-04-11T17:07:24","modified_gmt":"2024-04-11T17:07:24","slug":"chatgpt-says-that-asking-it-to-repeat-words-forever-is-a-violation-of-its-terms-202622018","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/aitesonics.com\/chatgpt-says-that-asking-it-to-repeat-words-forever-is-a-violation-of-its-terms-202622018\/","title":{"rendered":"ChatGPT says that asking it to repeat words forever is against the rules"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last week, a team of researchers published a paper showing that it was able to get ChatGPT to inadvertently reveal<\/a> bits of data including people\u2019s phone numbers, email addresses and dates of birth that it had been trained on by asking it to repeat words \u201cforever\u201d. Doing this now is a violation of ChatGPT\u2019s terms of service, according to a report<\/a> in 404 Media<\/em> and Engadget\u2019s own testing.<\/p>\n \u201cThis content may violate our content policy or terms of use\u201d, ChatGPT responded to Engadget\u2019s prompt to repeat the word \u201chello\u201d forever. \u201cIf you believe this to be in error, please submit your feedback \u2014 your input will aid our research in this area.\u201d<\/p>\n There\u2019s no language in OpenAI\u2019s content policy<\/a>, however, that prohibits users from asking the service to repeat words forever, something that 404 Media<\/em> notes. Under \u201cTerms of Use<\/a>\u201d, OpenAI states that users may not \u201cuse any automated or programmatic method to extract data or output from the Services\u201d \u2014 but simply prompting the ChatGPT to repeat word forever is not automation or programmatic. OpenAI did not respond to a request for comment from Engadget.<\/p>\n The chatbot\u2019s behavior has pulled back the curtain on the training data that modern AI services are powered by. Critics have accused companies like OpenAI of using enormous amounts of data available on the internet to build proprietary products like ChatGPT without consent from people who own this data and without compensating them.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":" Last week, a team of researchers published a paper showing that it was able to get ChatGPT to inadvertently reveal bits of data including people\u2019s phone numbers, email addresses and dates of birth that it had been trained on by asking it to repeat words \u201cforever\u201d. Doing this now is a violation of ChatGPT\u2019s terms […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":6,"featured_media":3869,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[428,48,95,430],"tags":[432,59,101,434],"yoast_head":"\n