OpenAI, GPT
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Infusing ChatGPT into a group chat context aligns with OpenAI's broader mission of transforming ChatGPT into a general-purpose AI assistant and removing as many barriers to access as possible, so that it becomes a deeply embedded tool in people's day-to-day lives.
For some writers, the em dash had become tarnished because it could indicate ChatGPT use — could an OpenAI update help it lose the stigma?
OpenAI dropped a mini-update to its model, releasing GPT-5.1 to the public. According to the company, the update will make its chatbot, ChatGPT, “smarter” and “more conversational,” introducing new styles of communicating and promising an improved ability to follow instructions. CEO Sam Altman called it “a nice upgrade.”
OpenAI's CEO Sam Altman announced that ChatGPT can now follow user instructions to avoid using em-dashes. However, some users reported that the issue persisted by showing their chats with the AI chatbot.
To start a group chat, you have to tap on the people icon at the top right corner of the screen on any new and existing conversation. ChatGPT will create a new conversation without your chat history if you start from an existing chat.
GPT-5.1 is the latest update from OpenAI, set to upgrade ChatGPT in a pretty groundbreaking way. While ChatGPT has always been a great AI chatbot, like any AI, it can sometimes suffer from hallucinations, coldness or just completely ignore instructions and OpenAI are hoping to remedy these issues with the release of GPT-5.1.
Elon Musk's X and xAI lawsuit against Apple and OpenAI can proceed, a federal judge ruled. The suit alleges Apple illegally monopolized smartphone and
ChatGPT maker OpenAI Inc. prematurely released a dangerously sycophantic and psychologically manipulative model, according to seven new lawsuits filed Thursday against the organization.
The parents of Zane Shamblin, a 23-year-old from Texas who died by suicide this summer, are pointing the finger at ChatGPT and are now suing its maker, San Francisco-based OpenAI.
A Munich court ordered OpenAI to pay damages to Germany’s largest music rights organisation for using copyrighted lyrics in AI models such as ChatGPT. View on euronews