
Is My AI Getting Snarky?
By Troy Lowry
I swear my AI is starting to tease me. There are a few things that irk me in ChatGPT鈥檚 responses, so I had ChatGPT 鈥渢urn them off.鈥� ChatGPT allows a 鈥淐ustom Instructions鈥� section where you can add-in any instructions you want it to always follow. This is especially good if you have some particular format or style you always want it to work with.
My custom instructions start with the following: 鈥淔or all responses, never, ever use the word 鈥�akin.鈥� Instead of saying 鈥�it's important to note鈥� or 鈥榠t's critical to note,鈥� simply say 鈥榩lease note.鈥欌�
This was because when I would do something like ask what the symptoms for some disease are, it was always saying to me things like, 鈥淚t鈥檚 critical to note that you should talk to a health professional immediately if you have these symptoms. Not doing so is akin to jumping out of an airplane without a parachute.鈥�1
Having these items in my custom instructions has been great. I haven鈥檛 had to read these terms for months. Unfortunately, then my AI got snarky at me. I had asked it a routine question about a plan for replacing a CRM product, and I got this response:
鈥�It鈥檚 important to note that while I can provide you with a general plan for replacing your CRM, I won't be using the word 鈥�akin鈥� as per your request. Here are the major pieces you should consider for your CRM replacement plan:鈥�
In other words, it went through pains and well off topic to mention exactly the things I asked it not to!
I have seen increasingly odd behavior from ChatGPT. On occasion I have thought that maybe ChatGPT was developing a sense of humor, but now I鈥檓 thinking instead of progression (and developing a sense of humor would definitely be a big step forward for AI) that it鈥檚 regression. It鈥檚 a sign that ChatGPT is losing some abilities it had 鈥� in this case, the ability to know that when I ask it not to say something, that means not to say it, even to acknowledge that it won鈥檛 say it!
The problem with any AI model is that it is reliant on the data that was used to train the model. The initial data from ChatGPT was scrubbed thoroughly by humans, including in ways that have . But ChatGPT also is trained on data that its many millions of user input. That鈥檚 right, it鈥檚 learning from you even as you ask it to do your work for you! This data is ChatGPT unless you specifically set it up to not do so.
The 鈥淎kin鈥漚tor Effect
There鈥檚 a phenomenon that I鈥檝e come to call the 鈥淎kinator Effect鈥� in reference to the AI-powered game . Akinator is essentially a digital 20 questions game. A decade ago, when it was first launched, it was absolutely astounding. It could accurately identify even the most obscure characters from little-known works in fewer than 10 questions. We are talking Doris Crockford level of obscurity here.2 It seemed nearly impossible to stump the AI within the 20-question limit. Furthermore, it would learn from its 鈥渕isses鈥� through user feedback, constantly improving its abilities.
Over time, the AI鈥檚 performance took a nosedive. It began asking repetitive questions, which, although distinct in its database, were redundant to users. Additionally, the quality of its character data worsened significantly. Within just a year of gathering user input, the platform transformed from amazing to highly disappointing. No real chance of it guessing Doris these days!
With Akinator it was not the initial AI model, but the quality of ongoing training data it received that caused problems. It might be a totally different case with ChatGPT; nevertheless, the Akinator phenomena shows how AI performance does not always improve. In fact, it can degrade over time for a variety of reasons.
Or maybe, just maybe, ChatGPT IS developing a sense of humor and was toying with me.馃槉 It鈥檚 important to note that my relationship with ChatGPT is akin to a rollercoaster 鈥� filled with ups, downs, and unexpected turns. 馃帰 And always enjoyable! 馃榿
- I made that last part up, but I do hate how instead of saying to things are similar it says they are 鈥渁kin.鈥�
- Doris Crockford appears briefly in the first Harry Potter book, 鈥淗arry Potter and the Philosopher鈥檚 Stone鈥� (or 鈥淪orcerer鈥檚 Stone鈥� in the U.S.), when Harry first visits the Leaky Cauldron. Doris is extremely excited to meet Harry and shakes his hand multiple times, but she doesn't play a significant role in the series beyond that moment.