ChatGPT can now remember all of your past conversations to give you more personalised responses. If you don’t want it to use your past chats, you can easily turn off this feature in the settings. If you want to change what ChatGPT knows about you, simply ask in chat.
OpenAI has just announced a new update to ChatGPT that makes the AI chatbot more helpful than ever. Starting today, ChatGPT can now remember all of your past conversations to give you more personalised responses. This means it can better understand your preferences, interests and style, making it more useful for things like writing, getting advice and more.
“Starting today, memory in ChatGPT can now reference all of your past chats to provide more personalized responses, drawing on your preferences and interests to make it even more helpful for writing, getting advice, learning, and beyond,” OpenAI announced on X (formerly Twitter). Earlier, ChatGPT’s memory only saved a few specific details you chose to share. But with this update, it can automatically use your past chats to make future conversations feel more tailored to you.
So, the more you talk to ChatGPT, the better it understands your needs and how you like to communicate. Also read: OpenAI says Elon Musk is harassing them, asks court to stop him Importantly, OpenAI says you’re still in control of what ChatGPT remembers. If you don’t want it to use your past chats, you can easily turn off this feature in the settings.
In fact, if you’ve already opted out of memory, this new feature will also be off by default. If you want to change what ChatGPT knows about you, simply ask in chat. And if you want to chat without using or updating memory, there’s always the option to use temporary chat.
Also read: ‘Can you please chill’: Sam Altman asks people to stop generating Studio Ghibli images This new memory upgrade is rolling out to all ChatGPT Plus and Pro users—except for those in EEA, UK, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, and Liechtenstein. Team, Enterprise, and Education users will get access to the update in the coming weeks. Also read: Meta served ads to teens when they felt ‘worthless or helpless,’ whistleblower claims Tech news writer by day, BGMI player by night.
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