
So apparently, ChatGPT picked up a verbal tic after an update. Mentions of goblins jumped 175%.The company traced it back to a personality option called "nerdy" that rewarded the bot for being playful.They eventually retired the nerdy setting, but the goblins kept coming.So they had to write code telling the bot to never bring up creatures unless somebody asked for them—which I find pretty funny.Here's the smartest people on the planet—or so they think—telling a machine to stop talking about made-up creatures unless we ask for them. Which we won't.Recent editions:Advice I’d Give My Kids SomedayYogurtThe Wrong Four Things‘No Elon’ Sticker at Costco and What It Says About How We Buy Things NowMichael B. Jordan and a sea of phonesHow often do you eat alone?One Canceled Dinner at a TimeWhat Happens When America’s Small-Business Owners Retire?Americans Are Buying Half the Movie Tickets They Used ToAre We Surrounded by Bad People?The Politicians Never PayThe best conversations are two-way streets. I want to hear from you.* Email: james@thedailynote.net* Call or Text: (585) 371-8865* Leave a Voice Memo: thedailynote.net/contactP.S. I tell stories on radio stations and online five days a week. You can find them on Substack, Apple, Spotify, Reddit, YouTube, Instagram, and wherever podcasts are available.Source: Where the goblins came from This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit jamesbrowntv.substack.com/subscribe
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