Sam Altman on how different generations use ChatGPT - Older people use it as a Google replacement - People in their 20s and 30s use it as a life advisor - People in college use it as an operating system
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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has detailed plans for ChatGPT to evolve into a 'very tiny reasoning model' with a trillion-token context, capable of storing and reasoning across a user's entire life. Altman explained that this model would document and remember everything from emails and conversations to books and other personal data, continuously appending new information to each user's context. Altman highlighted that young people, particularly college students, are already using ChatGPT as an 'operating system' for their lives, uploading files, connecting data sources, and using complex prompts. People in their 20s and 30s often use ChatGPT as a life advisor, while older users tend to use it as a Google replacement. The envisioned system could automate everyday tasks such as scheduling appointments, planning trips, and managing reminders. Altman also suggested that similar models could be used by organizations to manage and access comprehensive corporate data. This approach raises concerns about privacy and trust, with critics noting the risks of entrusting extensive personal information to large technology companies. Past incidents of anticompetitive behavior, political bias in chatbots, and AI systems generating inaccurate responses have been cited as potential pitfalls. Altman acknowledged these challenges and emphasized the need for transparency and reliability.