A new ChatGPT fan-out analysis finds a strong bias toward commercial intent. Here's what it means for your content strategy.
OpenAI included a line in Codex's instructions restricting references to goblins, gremlins, trolls, and ogres. It also ...
Creating high-quality content requires investing time and energy. A well-built social media strategy helps your business get ...
With most calendar-year end companies having filed their proxy with the SEC for this proxy season, I thought it would be a good time to reflect ...
The update targets content aggregators that don't post original content and instead simply re-upload others' posts.
Parshat Emor includes many disturbing passages—texts whose implications still reverberate today. When I used to teach English ...
If OpenAI can accidentally train its flagship model to obsess over goblins, what other more subtle and potentially harmful biases are being reinforced through the same feedback loops?
Tired of seeing spam sites, sponsored ads, AI slop, and other low-quality content dominate your Search results? Google rolled ...
In a federal courtroom in California on Thursday, Elon Musk testified that his own AI startup, xAI, has used OpenAI’s models ...
The maker of ChatGPT has an explanation for all the goblin talk ...
For at least a year, some ChatGPT users have noticed the LLM’s quirky habit of bringing up goblins, gremlins, trolls, and other creatures in its answers. The weird tic apparently became more common as ...
OpenAI developers included strongly worded instructions for its GPT-5.5 Codex models about not discussing goblins.