"Altman said he feels "kind of bad" asking a technology that boasts such wide-knowledge questions like, "Why does my kid stop dropping pizza on the floor and laughing?" Another example, Altman said, was a couple of months ago when he was at a party talking to someone who was also raising a newborn. Altman recalled that the parents said their six-month-old was "crawling everywhere." Altman said he grew concerned that his son was not at the same stage."
""I ran to the bathroom, and I was like, do I need to take my kid to the doctor tomorrow morning?" Altman said, describing what he typed into ChatGPT: "Is this okay?" Altman said OpenAI's chatbot responded "with a great answer, which was of course," his son's development was "normal.""
""It is personalized, like ChatGPT gets to know you, and by the way, you're the CEO of OpenAI, you probably are around all these high-achieving people, maybe you don't want to project that onto your kid, and you should just relax, and he'll be fine, whatever," Altman told Fallon of the answer."
Sam Altman uses ChatGPT to help navigate parenting a newborn and credits it with guiding him through common caregiving uncertainties. He used ChatGPT to assess whether his son's development was on track after hearing another parent describe a more advanced six-month-old. He sometimes feels guilty asking basic questions of a broadly knowledgeable AI. ChatGPT provided personalized, calming advice that reassured him his son's development was normal and encouraged him to relax. OpenAI also signaled an internal "code red" to focus on ChatGPT amid competitive advances from other companies like Google.
Read at Business Insider
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