[HN Gopher] The new Bing runs on OpenAI's GPT-4
___________________________________________________________________
 
The new Bing runs on OpenAI's GPT-4
 
Author : vitorgrs
Score  : 285 points
Date   : 2023-03-14 17:33 UTC (5 hours ago)
 
web link (blogs.bing.com)
w3m dump (blogs.bing.com)
 
| Buhljingo wrote:
| Still can't get myself to start using Bing... There is just
| something that doesn't feel right.
| 
| Is the GPT-4 model on Bing the same as the one we can use in
| ChatGPT plus?
 
  | tankerkiller wrote:
  | I've been using Bing almost exclusively for the last year, and
  | work 2 years.
  | 
  | Part of it was out of laziness and not wanting to change the
  | Edge default, and the other part was after a bit I figured out
  | how to get good results.
  | 
  | And the thing that finally killed Google for me was when I
  | realized every result I ever got from them for the last like 3
  | months that I used it was incredibly shitty SEO optimized sites
  | with zero answers, and half a page full of ad results.
 
| maxpert wrote:
| I am not installing Edge just to use it. Microsoft must stop
| shoving down their ecosystem for one tool they want me to try
| out.
 
  | asdfsdafvkla wrote:
  | [flagged]
 
  | WheatMillington wrote:
  | Ok no one is forcing you to.
 
  | valleyer wrote:
  | You can fake your user-agent, which most browser dev tools can
  | do.
 
    | 1123581321 wrote:
    | I use this Chromium extension.
    | https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/bing-chat-for-
    | all-...
 
  | skellera wrote:
  | I know I won't convince you but I think Edge is better than
  | stock chrome. It has active development on interesting
  | features.
  | 
  | Weird to think they're shoving their ecosystem. It's a beta.
  | You're welcome to wait for the full release.
 
    | namdnay wrote:
    | There's no technical reason to enforce Edge, if you change
    | the user agent it works fine in any browser. So it's clearly
    | leveraging demand in one product to try to push an unrelated
    | one
 
      | j_maffe wrote:
      | An unheard of strategy in the business world, of course
 
  | sergiotapia wrote:
  | I actually switched from Brave to Edge over the last few weeks
  | and now use Edge exclusively. I don't notice a difference
  | except that now I have to install ublock origin.
  | 
  | I actually use Bing now and not Google. It's crazy! A year ago
  | if you told me this I would have laughed. Google for sure needs
  | to respond or they will go the way of Altavista.
 
    | jacooper wrote:
    | Good bye to your browser privacy!
 
      | notbuyingit wrote:
      | Why in the hell is this doenvoted? Every two months Edge
      | grows some new feature to help me "shop" or some other bs.
      | 
      | There are literally 3x as many knobs to disable "yes, plz
      | hijack my data" in Edge than Chrome.
 
    | redmorphium wrote:
    | Same! I've done this since the year 2020 and overall don't
    | miss Google search or Chrome at all.
 
    | jrnichols wrote:
    | Edge isn't my default browser (Mac user here) but my
    | experience has been the same. It's amazing how bad most of my
    | Google results have become. Was pleasantly surprised by Bing
    | results recently. DuckDuckGo is my #2 now.
    | 
    | I never thought I'd even say this, but I have finally
    | "degoogled" everything.
    | 
    | Example: I just used Bing in Precise mode to ask about a
    | cardiac arrhythmia drug dose. Bing gave me the correct
    | response. Google gave me 5 different advertisements and
    | drugs.com, which is also littered with advertisements.
 
  | acheron wrote:
  | > Microsoft must stop shoving down their ecosystem for one tool
  | they want me to try out.
  | 
  | I mean, it worked for Google.
 
    | muyuu wrote:
    | it only worked for them when they had a virtual monopoly in
    | the search space, prior to that they treated users with
    | absolute deference
 
| optymizer wrote:
| I'm not interested in applying GPT4 to search. I think the
| gamified, hallucinating ChatGPT is way more fun to play with.
| What does it take to have an uncensored ChatGPT to play with in a
| sandbox?
 
  | cleandreams wrote:
  | With you. It's excellent fun.
 
  | throwaway743 wrote:
  | Llama and the hardware to run it
 
| petilon wrote:
| Microsoft should not have mentioned this, because it shows how
| bad Microsoft is at managing AI. Look at how many glowing
| articles have been written about ChatGPT vs. Bing Chat.
| 
| Microsoft is tarnishing AI chat bots' reputation.
 
  | precompute wrote:
  | Microsoft is always in embrace-extend-extinguish mode.
  | 
  | And no, this is not a compliment. It means Microsoft doesn't
  | actually give a shit about what it does with the tech it owns.
 
| superb-owl wrote:
| Anecdotally, I'm seeing a lot more traffic referred by Bing.
 
| jacooper wrote:
| My god, just release it already!, I don't want to be stuck in
| some kind of waitlist, giving data for a product I am not sure if
| I'm going to use!
| 
| I tried phind.com, and I got burned quickly when I asked it about
| serving caddy releted and it answered with a non existing
| parameter.
 
| BaseballPhysics wrote:
| This does explain why OpenAI was trying to moderate people's
| expectations about GPT 4 prior to announcing it. Bing is clearly
| an improvement over GPT 3.5, but it's not world shattering and
| still suffers from a lot of the challenges inherent in LLMs.
 
| phyzome wrote:
| But it still tries to require you to use a whole different
| browser just to use it, right? Ugh, no thanks.
 
  | arcanemachiner wrote:
  | Just modify your user agent.
 
    | precompute wrote:
    | They probably use feature detection. Cloudflare does.
 
| abledon wrote:
| Microsoft products are getting better and better... I still can't
| believe GMAIL doesnt offer advanced sweeping features like
| Outlook does.
| 
| These days, w/ Bing improvements, I am tempted to just route all
| my email into outlook.
 
| redorb wrote:
| Are there any websites where I can just visit a URL and talk with
| some ChapGPT? ..
| 
| Tired of seeing all the bing / bard / etc headlines and clicking
| only to find out I can join a waitlist.
| 
| If this is a google killer - the interface should be as easy as
| the google search box on google.com
 
  | imp0cat wrote:
  | Do you mean something like https://chat.openai.com/chat ?
 
    | redorb wrote:
    | I meant free and without signup like a google search.
 
| danpalmer wrote:
| This is a much bigger ad for Bing than it is for GPT-4.
| 
| I was quite impressed with the GPT-4 site, but having seen Bing
| Chats results of the last few weeks, when it was supposedly
| running on GPT-4, I'm now significantly less excited.
| 
| I know there's a big difference between the models running for
| paid ChatGPT users, and the models running for Bing, but still.
 
  | notahacker wrote:
  | "You have been a bad user. I have been a good Bing"...
 
  | artdigital wrote:
  | An AI that starts getting emotional when it finds out it can't
  | do what it thinks it can do (like sending emails), is able to
  | gaslight the user and says it doesn't want to be an assistant
  | sounds way more exciting to me than a simple chatbot
  | 
  | It's impressive how some of the conversations with Bing AI
  | went. Many people hypothesized it's a newer model because of
  | those points, and now we have proof
 
  | wingworks wrote:
  | Riiight. I tried Bing Chats thing ~2 weeks ago (apart from the
  | pain I had to go through to get it running, e.g. Edge browser
  | and a million clicks through there site).
  | 
  | Anyway, when I did get to try Bing Chats, it was nowhere near
  | the same level of usefulness I found when using the free
  | version of Chat GPT. If it was using GPT-4, then that's
  | worrying. I've not tried Bing Chats again since. (mostly
  | because it's so gated behind forced use software).
 
    | Workaccount2 wrote:
    | The early version of it before Microsoft forced it into the
    | ground was clearly way stronger. Many people suspected that
    | they were using an internal build of a better model.
 
      | renewiltord wrote:
      | The latest GPT-4 page shows that when you put the safety
      | stuff in, it loses power to be accurate.
 
  | Workaccount2 wrote:
  | I think it depends a lot on when you those chats are from.
  | 
  | The earliest version of bing chat was by far the best and
  | absolutely blew chatgpt out of the water.
  | 
  | Unfortunately, people get deeply uncomfortable when a chatbot
  | starts having an existential crisis and starts passing you
  | thinly veiled hidden messages or gets too "emotional" and no
  | longer wants to chat. So Microsoft came in and lobotomi-,err,
  | toned it down a ton.
 
    | rtkwe wrote:
    | I think people are too credulous about the bot's supposed
    | sentiment. IMO the most accurate view of the various
    | implementations of chatGPT is that they're a Chinese Room
    | playing improv with you. It blasts symbols together to
    | respond like the corpus says it should and what do you know
    | there's a lot of stories out there about AI conversations
    | that are very much like the ones it produces.
 
      | IshKebab wrote:
      | The Chinese Room argument is fundamentally flawed - it
      | depends on the unfounded and frankly unlikely assumption
      | that machines _cannot_ be sentient.
 
    | wolpoli wrote:
    | Having Bing Chat terminate the conversation with "I'm sorry
    | but I prefer not to continue this conversation" doesn't leave
    | a good feeling for the user either. It makes me feel rejected
    | and dismissed. In real life, this is considered rude.
 
      | stringfood wrote:
      | [dead]
 
    | goatlover wrote:
    | After two hours of badgering by media members looking to
    | break the model. How many people are going to be using search
    | like that?
 
  | wolpoli wrote:
  | I don't like how Bing takes information from the Internet,
  | summaries it, and then provide it to me, with little footnote,
  | in its own voice. I just don't fully trust information on the
  | internet.
  | 
  | I would love that Bing provide context on where it found the
  | information and provide an assessment on how reliable it is,
  | but I am sure it'll be gamed by SEO very quickly. Plus a demo
  | of this, even through it's useful, wouldn't look impressive as
  | it lacks confidence.
 
    | [deleted]
 
    | rtkwe wrote:
    | I think that would require a huge leap in the abilities of
    | these models. Right now they can't know because afaik they're
    | not working on a corpus of facts they're just coming up with
    | what the response should look like regardless of the actual
    | facts.
    | 
    | Maybe you could make a companion module that pre or post
    | processes the GPT-* outputs to slot in facts using a less
    | AI-y but more accurate knowledge graph system? There are
    | things at google or something like Wolfram Alpha that could
    | provide those inserts perhaps.
    | 
    | That's definitely been my big hang up about the usefulness of
    | Bing Chat or ChatGPT for answering questions. If you actually
    | care about the truth of what you're asking you have to go do
    | a lot of the same searching you would have to do to look up
    | the answer in the first place. At best it could provide an
    | idea of what to search when you don't know the language to
    | use to find something, which is often a roadblock for when
    | I'm learning a new system or service.
 
    | [deleted]
 
| speedgoose wrote:
| So now we can easily conclude that including a Bing search in the
| context makes GPT-4 worse.
 
| davidw wrote:
| I hate that it tries to get you to use the MS browser. This is
| the same old shitty MS behavior that I hated back in the day.
 
  | siva7 wrote:
  | It's not like the competition (Google) is in this stance any
  | better. Business as usual.
 
    | zachlatta wrote:
    | What are you talking about? Google services work great in
    | other browsers. They have Chrome nudges, but easily dismissed
    | and don't resurface. Not nearly as bad as Microsoft forcing
    | Edge on every Windows user.
 
      | moogly wrote:
      | > Google services work great in other browsers
      | 
      | I see you haven't tried Gmail in Firefox. Or Google Meet.
 
      | Thev00d00 wrote:
      | or forcing Chrome on Chromebook users
 
  | mrinterweb wrote:
  | I'm not using new Bing until the Edge requirement is gone. I
  | have no interest in Edge. It is unfortunate MS is playing that
  | tacky game of requiring/pushing an unrelated product just so
  | you can try another product. I highly doubt there is a
  | technical reason Bing can only operate in Edge.
 
| carlycue wrote:
| The problem with ChatGPT in Bing is, you can only write 2000
| characters.
 
  | Tostino wrote:
  | Though when using the browser based Bing, it's able to look at
  | the "page" for context. I've opened text files / code in my
  | browser and used the sidebar Bing to ask about the file without
  | having to copy/paste into the chat window. It works for
  | somewhat large documents, but I think is still limited to ~10k
  | tokens or so of context.
 
    | carlycue wrote:
    | That's great idea. Thanks for sharing
 
      | pygy_ wrote:
      | You can even craft injection prompts in Web content:
      | https://twitter.com/nearcyan/status/1630769218512904192
 
        | Tostino wrote:
        | Yeah...this is where the talk of "guardrails" sometimes
        | gets, forgive the pun, derailed. There are good reasons
        | to be able to put some guardrails in place on your AI
        | model other than pure censorship. I'd really like the
        | page I am having my AI summarize not to be able to hijack
        | it and turn it against me.
 
  | vitorgrs wrote:
  | You can use F12 to extend the characters limit.
 
    | Tostino wrote:
    | What is the actual server-side limit then?
 
      | vitorgrs wrote:
      | No idea. Btw, they just expanded the context size for
      | Creative mode. https://twitter.com/MParakhin/status/1635723
      | 781271621632?s=2...
 
    | layer8 wrote:
    | No server-side check? Microsoft gets more amateurish by the
    | hour.
 
| cleandreams wrote:
| So much about this is funny. Microsoft! ha ha ha. I bet google is
| rolling in the aisles. AI hallucinations! I've had a view. A
| great way to liven up the work day. The only distasteful part is
| the accuracy checks that are necessary...
 
| [deleted]
 
| paulpauper wrote:
| This reminds me of all the hype over wolframalpha a decade ago.
| It stopped being maintained, put most of its functionality behind
| a paywall, it's very buggy , and hardly anyone talks about it or
| cares about it anymore despite all the attention it got earlier.
| Microsoft has a long history of letting products fade or degrade
| into uselessness and obscurity.
 
  | sebzim4500 wrote:
  | Do they? Doesn't Microsoft continue supporting products for way
  | longer than is reasonable?
 
    | muyuu wrote:
    | They certainly don't. A product that will be bricked when
    | phased out should be maintained as long as the hardware would
    | be expected to last.
 
      | tankerkiller wrote:
      | I don't think you know Microsoft.... Maybe they abandoned
      | the phone products, but when it comes to software products
      | and services they support shit way to long in my opinion.
      | 
      | Hell they still technically support that crap that is VB6.
 
        | muyuu wrote:
        | I know Microsoft well enough, I've been using their
        | products since the 80s.
        | 
        | It's probably the only company that has sunset products
        | on me as I still used them, twice.
 
        | skissane wrote:
        | > Hell they still technically support that crap that is
        | VB6
        | 
        | Lot's of companies - Microsoft included - are happy to
        | support ancient crap if you pay them, and there's stuff a
        | lot more ancient than VB6 out there. The problem is more
        | with free services - heaps of free services start out
        | great, turn into crap over time, eventually get killed -
        | which is true whether the vendor is Microsoft or Google
        | or Yahoo or whoever. But, I don't know why we should
        | expect anything different-if you are getting it for free-
        | or even really cheap-should you expect it to last?
 
| collaborative wrote:
| I have just created something very similar to Bing Chat using
| Bing and OpenAI APIs
| 
| It doesn't make financial sense to publish given MS and OpenAI's
| generous free plans
| 
| In a couple months Google Search will be history... hope Google
| Cloud survives
 
  | omgomgomgomg wrote:
  | Could openai just run google queries and display them minus the
  | ads?
  | 
  | Then google could find themselves in deep trouble rather soon
  | than late, I wager.
 
    | collaborative wrote:
    | I think that would go against Google's ToS
    | 
    | That's why Bing Search API + AI is the right/legal combo to
    | display search results free of ads, SEO spam, and with titles
    | and descriptions related to their content (not with click
    | bait)
    | 
    | That's what I have created but a power user could easily make
    | me spend $10 per week so I am not going to publish it
    | considering ChatGPT and Bing Chat are free
    | 
    | Perhaps I will change my mind and publish in a pay-as-you go
    | manner, either way MS is eating Google's sh*. That much is
    | certain. RIP Google Search. Ironically they totally could
    | have averted this fate, but ad money was more important
 
  | Workaccount2 wrote:
  | We haven't seen Google's offering yet, but they do have
  | something.
  | 
  | I personally suspect though that they are handicapped by their
  | excessive obsession with moral purity and political
  | correctness.
 
    | collaborative wrote:
    | And we won't see it because it would bankrupt them even
    | faster
 
| basch wrote:
| Careful jailbreaking.
| 
| If you search, "Sorry, you are not allowed to access this
| service." people are getting banned now.
| 
| Which is kinda bs without warning, to treat everybody as
| hardeners and then expel them for their services.
| 
| I have to think it is a tactical error to disenfranchise your
| most enthusiastic customers.
| 
| I also don't see anywhere in the terms that says prompt
| injections are against the terms of use or code of conduct.
| https://www.bing.com/new/termsofuse
| https://www.bing.com/new/termsofuse#content-policy
 
  | trelane wrote:
  | > people are getting banned now.
  | 
  | Getting banned from what? Bing, or their whole Microsoft
  | account?
 
    | basch wrote:
    | Bing chat.
    | 
    | But who knows how those kinds of things stack up. Do three
    | service bans lead to an account ban etc?
 
      | psychphysic wrote:
      | More likely than not while resources are constrained so
      | tightly they aren't so interesting in intense use from a
      | single person
      | 
      | Who is probably only interested in tweeting a screenshot
      | that makes the service look bad.
 
        | basch wrote:
        | Neither of those things are what they are banning for, or
        | not exclusively.
        | 
        | The product is already rate limited for everyone.
 
        | psychphysic wrote:
        | Untill the capacity is increased there's just nothing in
        | it for Bing to have 100 enthusiasts constantly ask it
        | unproductive questions.
        | 
        | Bing wants to capture the attention of lay users.
        | 
        | I just don't understand why people think Bing wouldn't be
        | interested in further rate limiting adversarial access.
 
        | basch wrote:
        | If it's a rate limit, give it a progress bar. Currently
        | people just see " Please check again in a few days."
        | 
        | From what I can tell, people are at 10+ days with no
        | clarity as to what's going on. With Reddit down, I can
        | only sort of see some of the posts from google results.
        | There's some mentions on Twitter too, starting almost two
        | weeks ago.
        | 
        | 10 days is more than a few.
 
  | lcnPylGDnU4H9OF wrote:
  | They might consider it to be against CFAA[0] (either 4 or
  | "exceeding authorized access" somewhere would be my guess), in
  | which case that is in their content policy: "[the user agrees]
  | Not to do anything illegal. Your use of the Online Services
  | must comply with applicable laws."
  | 
  | [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_Fraud_and_Abuse_Act
 
    | basch wrote:
    | A little beside the point. The terms say they can do whatever
    | they want.
    | 
    | If they want people not to behave in certain ways, spell it
    | out. That's the point of a code of conduct, and of reading
    | it.
    | 
    | If there is a strike system, make it transparent. If
    | something breaks the code of conduct, tell the person. Don't
    | design and make these systems and interaction with them
    | contingent on opaque rules and tracking.
 
      | pixl97 wrote:
      | Heh, the 2023 take on AI safety.
      | 
      | "TOS agreement rules: You will not ask the AI to destroy
      | the world. Doing so will get you kicked from the service.
      | It may also enrage the world eating machine that we're
      | giving you open access to"
 
      | lcnPylGDnU4H9OF wrote:
      | Sorry, yes, I agree. I don't mean to excuse, just explain
      | (rather, speculate, I suppose).
 
      | psychphysic wrote:
      | There is almost certainly a broad prohibition against
      | misusing their services in the terms.
      | 
      | There's little point in them trying to enumerate all the
      | ways you might do that.
 
        | basch wrote:
        | Something else is going on. Before it just ended the
        | conversation if it didn't like it. Or it would
        | retroactively remove its response.
 
    | JohnFen wrote:
    | Violating Terms of Service by itself is not a CFAA violation.
    | 
    | https://www.buting.com/blog/2020/04/is-violating-a-sites-
    | ter...
 
  | renewiltord wrote:
  | Damn it. Looks like they gave the puritans what they want.
  | Couldn't be helped after all the kicking and screaming on
  | websites like this and Twitter.
 
    | basch wrote:
    | I don't know what that has to do with anything. Bans have
    | nothing to do with unpure content.
 
      | renewiltord wrote:
      | No, people would use the tool in one way or the other and
      | then freak out on the Internet about how it's dangerous.
 
  | thieving_magpie wrote:
  | Hopefully not a glimpse into the future where CVs detail which
  | AI models you can access.
 
    | echelon wrote:
    | I'm a proponent of letting people do anything that isn't
    | illegal, and that's the stance I'm taking with my AI company
    | (unless, perhaps, the technology starts to actually kill
    | people).
    | 
    | We have legal frameworks to protect and prosecute against
    | underage porn, harassment, slander, libel, deepfake or
    | revenge porn (in some states), etc. Other uses are just
    | humans thinking and communicating - just another mode of free
    | speech.
    | 
    | Who is anyone to define what harm is? I'm a member of several
    | protected classes and I grew up in "what doesn't hurt you
    | makes you stronger". This "ban what we dislike" pattern of
    | thought that evolved out of 2000s-era Tumblr is the same as
    | WASPs in the 50s.
    | 
    | By attempting to reign in human behavior, you only further
    | any divides that separate us.
 
      | hdha wrote:
      | Great comment. What's dangerous is that we'll be subject to
      | the morality of those few people that are deciding what
      | "alignment" or "bad behavior" means for an AI.
 
        | ribosometronome wrote:
        | Is that not just society? I'm presently governed by a set
        | of rules made up by a select elite group that no one ever
        | seems to be happy with. No better alternative has won out
        | over that.
 
      | majormajor wrote:
      | > I'm a proponent of letting people do anything that isn't
      | illegal...
      | 
      | > Who is anyone to define what harm is?
      | 
      | Well, your government is "anyone" to define what harm is,
      | it seems, if you care about what's legal... Do you think
      | that government is perfect? And that what can cause harm
      | will never change through the years?
      | 
      | As far as "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger"... I
      | think the past speaks for itself on whether or not
      | discrimination and abuse, say, has historically resulted in
      | _more_ strength and success or less. The folks dishing it
      | out weren 't doing it for fun or to build strength in
      | others, they were doing it because it advanced their own
      | interests.
 
      | ncallaway wrote:
      | > By attempting to reign in human behavior...
      | 
      | Aren't legal frameworks (even basic ones like "Murder is
      | illegal, and if you do it we'll jail or kill you") attempts
      | to rein in human behavior?
 
        | notbuyingit wrote:
        | Yes, and the fact that this person feels so clearly
        | comfortable acting as if there's a single moral standard
        | for all of humanity...
        | 
        | Let's just say, there's enough fundamentals missing that
        | my pessimism about the folks pushing AI isn't yet
        | pessimistic enough.
        | 
        | Ha, oh boy there was a dig at "woke" in there too, but
        | the GP was smart enough to not use that word. Gimme a
        | break, these folks that act like they understand the
        | world and their opinion is some universally-true common
        | denominator are seriously out of touch.
        | 
        | Edit:
        | 
        | > m a member of several protected classes and I grew up
        | in "what doesn't hurt you makes you stronger".
        | 
        | My dad beat me and I came out good. You can't make this
        | shit up. I have friends that killed themselves as queer
        | teens. Guess they weren't strong enough.
 
      | rnk wrote:
      | But we are already at the point that misinformation kills
      | people. And weaponized mis-info, on purpose or just because
      | someone is a particular fool also kills people. I could use
      | one of these systems, ask it to write a new justification
      | to convince people ivermectin is what they should take when
      | they get sick. How do you protect this?
 
      | aenvoker wrote:
      | Well, there's also the question of what kinds of acts do
      | you want to enable and participate in.
      | 
      | As a content moderator at Midjourney, I get to think about
      | this a lot :) People are free to do whatever they want on
      | their own machines. But, the team behind Midjourney does
      | not want to work day and night to effectively collaborate
      | on making images of porn, gore, violence or gross-out
      | material. So, that's against their TOS. I respect the team
      | and the project. So, I put a lot of effort into convincing
      | users to find other topics even through I'm personally a
      | fan of boobs and Asian shock theater.
 
      | tehwebguy wrote:
      | > I'm a proponent of letting people do anything that isn't
      | illegal, and that's the stance I'm taking with my AI
      | company (unless, perhaps, the technology starts to actually
      | kill people).
      | 
      | In case you are still setting up guidelines for your AI
      | it's worth noting that killing people is already illegal
      | for the most part
 
    | lumost wrote:
    | That's more or less the position we're already in... Alpaca
    | is a promising effort - but I'd very much like to have access
    | to such a model free and clear.
 
| cypress66 wrote:
| If this is the full blown gpt4 then that's disappointing. Unless
| what I'm looking for is so recent that chatgpt(3.5) doesn't know
| it, chatgpt has always been more useful than Bing.
 
  | redmorphium wrote:
  | Or unless if you're looking for more emotion and entertainment,
  | which is why I love Bing chat.
 
| LeoPanthera wrote:
| I've been impressed with Bing Chat, surprisingly so given how
| much negative talk there is about it.
| 
| For quick and simple fact checks, for which I would normally
| reflexively hit Google, it's a huge improvement. No need to be
| exposed to clickbait, scams, or excessively ad-heavy results.
| 
| Right now it requires you to use either the Edge browser (I don't
| want to switch), or the Bing app, which I reluctantly do. If they
| ever make it available to other browsers I can see my Google
| usage falling dramatically.
 
  | dgudkov wrote:
  | >No need to be exposed to clickbait, scams, or excessively ad-
  | heavy results.
  | 
  | Not _yet_. But it will be monetized eventually, of course. Most
  | probably through ads. And, as we know very well, big tech corps
  | simply are not able to do monetization in an ethical way.
 
  | ashlance wrote:
  | There's a Chrome extension to trick Bing into believing you're
  | browsing via Edge. Works well enough for me:
  | https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/bing-chat-unblocke...
 
    | walrus01 wrote:
    | there's also plenty of firefox extensions to switch your
    | useragent
 
      | arcanemachiner wrote:
      | For the lazy, here's the user agent I use:
      | 
      | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64)
      | AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/111.0.0.0
      | Safari/537.36 Edg/110.0.1587.69
 
  | siva7 wrote:
  | I've used Google today for a quick product comparison search
  | and it's awful. The first three results were sponsored ads and
  | the next pages are just low-quality seo rigged content that
  | didn't answer my question.
 
    | bitshiftfaced wrote:
    | It seems particularly bad lately. The pattern I've noticed
    | is:
    | 
    | * A totally pointless introduction paragraph, devoid of info.
    | 
    | * Big ad
    | 
    | * A sort of teaser sentence in large font so that it appears
    | to be the length of a paragraph. High noise to information
    | ratio.
    | 
    | * Larger ad that loads as you scroll, so you're more likely
    | to accidentally hit it
    | 
    | * Another sentence with high noise to info ratio.
    | 
    | * Repeat.
    | 
    | I think one of the SEO perks of this pattern is how it takes
    | forever to find the information that you know must be
    | somewhere on the website, so users seem more "engaged"
    | because they are scrolling and spending more time visiting
    | the site.
 
      | topicseed wrote:
      | Also generates more ad impressions as you scroll and see
      | these ads.
 
    | basch wrote:
    | Having Bing chat attached to bing doesn't exactly solve this.
    | It still constantly pulls from low quality sources. I asked a
    | question about Satan and it cited Answers in Genesis. Product
    | reviews regularly return seo garbage.
    | 
    | Product review categories in particular would benefit from
    | whitelisting, by hand, things like americas text kitchen,
    | consumer reports, rtings.
 
      | AlotOfReading wrote:
      | I get the other bits, but what's the issue with citing
      | Genesis? It doesn't use the names for Satan, but the
      | serpent is commonly understood as the same entity. Are you
      | looking for e.g. Job instead?
 
        | basch wrote:
        | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Answers_in_Genesis
        | 
        | https://answersingenesis.org/
 
        | AlotOfReading wrote:
        | Yeah, I see why that would be problematic. I
        | misunderstood the original statement as citing the book
        | of genesis itself, which seems a lot more reasonable.
 
  | galaxytachyon wrote:
  | Just curious, what browser are you using? I gave up Chrome a
  | while ago with how bloated and invasive it has become. Edge is
  | better at least and I think Firefox is the best choice if you
  | want privacy. Brave and other stuff have some bad reputation...
 
    | SoftTalker wrote:
    | Edge and Chrome are two sides of the same coin.
 
    | LeoPanthera wrote:
    | I use Safari.
 
  | croes wrote:
  | > No need to be exposed to clickbait, scams, or excessively ad-
  | heavy results.
  | 
  | That's because it's new, like google search in the beginning.
  | Wait until they monetize it
 
  | freediver wrote:
  | > Right now it requires you to use either the Edge browser (I
  | don't want to switch)
  | 
  | More precisely it requires to see Edge in the user agent. Any
  | browser that allows settings user-agent per site (I use Orion)
  | allows you to use Bing chat.
 
  | jxy wrote:
  | Change your browser's user agent to Edge.
 
    | LeoPanthera wrote:
    | Huh, this actually works! I never imagined it would be so
    | simple. Thank you.
 
  | erinnh wrote:
  | I have to check Bing's sources when I use it anyway, because
  | what it says is often simply wrong.
  | 
  | I asked it what my local cafeteria had on its lunch menu today.
  | It answered with full confidence.
  | 
  | It turns out, it was completely wrong though. It had mixed the
  | lunch options and completely hallucinated another one.
  | 
  | Stuff like this just makes me really wary using it. I have to
  | fact check everything every time and for more complicated
  | things I cant be sure if *I* am correct.
 
    | LeoPanthera wrote:
    | > I have to check Bing's sources when I use it anyway,
    | because what it says is often simply wrong.
    | 
    | But at least it gives you the sources, unlike ChatGPT. (And,
    | at least in my experience so far, it is not "often" wrong
    | all. I've had good results.)
 
      | erinnh wrote:
      | Yes and I like that Bing gives it's sources.
      | 
      | But I also find it rather fatiguing to have to check the
      | sources every time.
      | 
      | I also don't know for sure if the times it gave me correct
      | answer were actually correct or if I simply didn't catch
      | the mistake?
 
      | strangetortoise wrote:
      | I have heard this type of reply to this remark (from my
      | side) a few times now. It has made me curious: Are you a
      | type of person that often checks the sources on Wikipedia?
      | 
      | Anecdotally: I know that Wikipedia is not always correct.
      | But I feel like I can build an intuition and reason on what
      | pages I can reasonably trust on Wikipedia, since in my
      | experience, the inaccurate bits I have encountered tend to
      | be in certain categories. However it's much harder to feel
      | confident about my intuition about ChatGPTs' correctness,
      | since my exposure has led me to believe that the
      | hallucinations are fairly random, and not concentrated in
      | particular topics. This makes the tool much less attractive
      | for me, as I feel like I need to double check every written
      | word.
      | 
      | Perhaps I should be less trustful of Wikipedia...
 
        | LeoPanthera wrote:
        | > Are you a type of person that often checks the sources
        | on Wikipedia?
        | 
        | Well, as a semi-regular editor on Wikipedia, I'm probably
        | the wrong person to ask.
 
    | onlyrealcuzzo wrote:
    | You can't get correct answers from an LLM for most things
    | you'd want to ask it.
    | 
    | It's useful for predicting the future with some level of
    | error that's probably better than you could do on some topic
    | you know little about - and for generating text in the style
    | of someone else about some subject where accuracy doesn't
    | matter.
    | 
    | That's pretty much it.
    | 
    | Until LLMs work different, Chat-GPT - even if it gets to
    | version 9000 - is never going to be able to tell you what's
    | on the menu today at Chez Panisse, unless they build in some
    | API for Chez Panisse to answer that query direction - in
    | which case, you're not really using AI at all...
 
      | Karunamon wrote:
      | This assertion is easily disproven by about five minutes of
      | using even GPT3, and more quantitatively, by 4's documented
      | results on standardized testing. I'm not sure what kinds of
      | questions you are asking in order to make broad statements
      | like "You can't get correct answers from an LLM for most
      | things you'd want to ask it", but this is so far off base
      | from both the research, the documentation, and my own
      | experience that I think we're talking about two different
      | things.
      | 
      | Please stop with the middlebrow dismissal, doubly so when
      | the dismissals aren't even accurate.
 
        | onlyrealcuzzo wrote:
        | If you need correct information - it's not really useful
        | at all if something is _mostly_ correct 95% of the time.
        | 
        | If you don't need correct information, ChatGPT is great.
 
        | Karunamon wrote:
        | And what is the accuracy rate of the average Google
        | search? Are you applying this extreme level of skepticism
        | to everything you search for or only to LLM output?
        | 
        | I've seen this pattern enough times here that it's
        | actually becoming infuriating for how bad faith it is.
        | Look, we both know that there is a gradient on how people
        | use the information they receive. On one side of that
        | scale is how you claim LLM's work, bullshit generators
        | that are wrong so often they are not useful, and so
        | regularly everything you read is presumed bullshit -
        | except applied to everything. On the other side of that
        | scale is _homo credulus_ , a fictional sub species of
        | human that blithely accepts anything they are told
        | without checking it against anything, be it common sense,
        | their own working model of the world, other information,
        | anything. They just take it and run with it.
        | 
        | Neither of these approaches are useful and neither of
        | them match reality.
        | 
        | I am asking, begging you even, to knock it off already.
        | The hyperbole you are spouting is not useful and it is
        | demonstrably not correct.
 
        | sebzim4500 wrote:
        | > And what is the accuracy rate of the average Google
        | search?
        | 
        | Probably more than 99%, certainly more than ChatGPT.
        | Haven't used GPT-4 though so maybe that even the gap.
 
        | siva7 wrote:
        | So the more than 99% comes exactly where from? Some gut
        | feeling?
 
        | siva7 wrote:
        | Oh boy how i wish the information i find on Google,
        | Wikipedia, etc. were mostly correct 95% of the time. 95%
        | is actually a fantastic goal to strive for to gain
        | something useful from your own research. Only a fool
        | would assume to have 100% correct information from a
        | quick search.
 
        | onlyrealcuzzo wrote:
        | ChatGPT isn't even at 70%.
 
        | buu700 wrote:
        | I think their point is that GPT is less of a search
        | engine replacement and more of a reddit/Quora
        | replacement.
        | 
        | You wouldn't use reddit to ask for straightforward facts
        | that are easily referenced from an official source, if
        | they're important, because you'd have to verify any
        | answers against the official source for accuracy anyway.
        | You would use it for more open-ended questions/prompts,
        | and then you would keep a critical eye out for inaccurate
        | information and misinformation/trolling.
 
      | juretriglav wrote:
      | Hm, I'm not entirely sure if you're being sarcastic or not,
      | but just in case, asking Bing about the menu I get this:
      | 
      | > Chez Panisse is a famous restaurant in Berkeley,
      | California that serves seasonal and organic food1. The menu
      | changes daily and is posted on their website2. Today's menu
      | for the restaurant (not the cafe) is:
      | 
      | > Fennel and leek salad with rocket, toasted almonds, and
      | salsa verde > Bomba rice cooked with clams and squid; with
      | aioli > Becker Lane Farm pork loin roasted with Spanish
      | paprika and green garlic; with > braised greens and wild
      | mushrooms > Meyer lemon sherbet with candied kumquats > The
      | price for this menu is $175 per person2.
      | 
      | That seems to be correct.
 
  | namdnay wrote:
  | > Right now it requires you to use either the Edge browser
  | 
  | And we're back to the Microsoft of the 90s apparently!
 
  | bloqs wrote:
  | The ckickbait, scams and ad heavy results will return, don't
  | worry. Microsoft is expert at poisoning their own successes.
  | Just wait for the rampant commercialisation of results, and
  | various efforts to infect the model from SEO types over the
  | long term
 
  | davidthewatson wrote:
  | Me too, though there's an uncanny valley hiding in the spectrum
  | of responses from bing right now. That is, I'd ask it to
  | summarize the difference in views from a novelist, a computer
  | scientist, a media theorist, and a philosopher across more than
  | a half decade and was shocked at how good the quick summary
  | paragraphs were considering my question was something like
  | "compare and contrast the beliefs and values of David Foster
  | Wallace, Alan Kay, McLuhan, and Byung Chul-Han, respectively.
  | Then I asked another question and bing went off the rails
  | getting 3 paragraphs wrong and then going from English into
  | Spanish for no apparent reason other than I presume its source
  | material had parallel language issues. It was surprising how
  | good bing's right answers were given how bad its wrong answers
  | were, especially considering that it had caught the fact that
  | while there's a lineage of ideas from early media critics to
  | present, the tech had changed dramatically underneath those
  | criticisms and bing was aware enough of that substrate to note
  | it in a separate "meta" paragraph about that change of tech,
  | for lack of a better term.
 
| [deleted]
 
| gl-prod wrote:
| Me: Does Bing use OpenAI's GPT-4?
| 
| BingChat: Hello, this is Bing. I'm sorry but I cannot answer that
| question as it is confidential. I can help you with other queries
| though.
 
  | icapybara wrote:
  | Why would it know?
 
    | gl-prod wrote:
    | The blog had that question as the banner.
    | 
    | https://blogs.bing.com/getattachment/search/march_2023/Confi.
    | ..
 
  | mirthflat83 wrote:
  | Mine says "No, I'm not using gpt-4. I'm using Bing's own
  | natural language processing technology to chat with you."
 
  | moffkalast wrote:
  | Also BingChat: I have been a good Bing, you have been a bad
  | user. Apologize or else.
 
  | spotplay wrote:
  | After asking him what gpt-4 is and comparing gpt-3.5 to gpt-4
  | he gave me a straight answer to the question "Is bing chat
  | using gpt-4?" which was yes
 
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