Opinion | AI Can Work for Us
Briefly

The article discusses how users have started employing AI, particularly ChatGPT, to generate personalized depictions of their lives. These portrayals, often quirky and abstract, reflect users' personalities and activities, often revealing unexpected insights like frequent mentions of broccoli. The author, a board member at Microsoft and an early investor in OpenAI, reflects on the dual nature of AI, which can both augment creativity and raise questions about privacy, identity, and what data A.I. retains from users. This phenomenon sparks contemplation on monitoring in the digital age.
By absorbing the wide-ranging mix of work questions, personal goals and everything else that makes up our ChatGPT history, the system teases out patterns and connections that may not be readily apparent.
These portraits clarify and dramatize enduring concerns about identity and privacy in the digital age. How much exactly is ChatGPT remembering?
Read at www.nytimes.com
[
|
]