After September 2021, ChatGPT won’t be able to get any details.
ChatGPT has changed the way AI works. Earlier this year, millions worldwide rushed to use a system that can talk like a person. This made ChatGPT the fastest-growing website ever.
On the other hand, the machine can’t answer questions about recent events because its information ended in September 2021.
When Fox News Digital tried to ask ChatGPT about current events, like if the Titan submersible explosion could have been stopped or what charges Hunter Biden was hit with this month, the chatbot said it didn’t know about events after September 2021.
When asked why it doesn’t know the language after September 2021, ChatGPT said, “As an AI language model, I have a cutoff date because my training data only goes up to September 2021.” “The cutoff date is the end of the training data, and I don’t have access to any information or events that happened after that date.”
After September 2021, ChatGPT won’t be able to get any details.
ChatGPT has changed the way AI works. Earlier this year, millions worldwide rushed to use a system that can talk like a person. This made ChatGPT the fastest-growing website ever.
On the other hand, the machine can’t answer questions about recent events because its information ended in September 2021.
When Fox News Digital tried to ask ChatGPT about current events, like if the Titan submersible explosion could have been stopped or what charges Hunter Biden was hit with this month, the chatbot said it didn’t know about events after September 2021.
When asked why it doesn’t know the language after September 2021, ChatGPT said, “As an AI language model, I have a cutoff date because my training data only goes up to September 2021.” “The cutoff date is the end of the training data, and I don’t have access to any information or events that happened after that date.”
ChatGPT came out in November; by January, it had 100 million monthly active users. This was the fastest-growing user base in history. Its release was a turning point for the tech world, causing other artificial intelligence labs to speed up their work on making programs that were as smart or smarter.
Google, for example, made a robot called Bard and put it out in March. The system did not get as much praise as ChatGPT, but in one crucial way, it is very different: Bard can search the internet for valuable answers.
Bard can answer users’ questions about current events, like the violence in Russia because he searches the internet for news stories, social media posts, and expert views.
“Bard is trained on a huge number of news articles, which gives it a broad understanding of current events,” Bard said when asked how it can answer questions about current events. It added that the system also pulls responses from social media and experts publicly speaking about the topic online.
“If you ask Bard a question about what’s going on in the world right now, it can look through its knowledge base for relevant news articles and give you a summary of what it finds.”
Tech makers are making the systems even more powerful by adding artificial intelligence to search engines. Google, for example, put out a trial called Search Generative Experience (SGE) in May. SGE adds replies made by AI to search results.
“Let’s say you’re looking for removable wallpaper to spruce up your rental,” Google said in a blog post about the new system. “The AI-generated response would include quick facts, like if it’s easy to remove, as well as a list of stylish options, including price, customer ratings, and links to purchase.”