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36 posts


From how the team operates, I always thought Codex would eventually win. But I am pleasantly surprised to see it happening so quickly.
Thank you to all the builders; you inspire us to work even harder.
Craig Weiss@craigzLiszt
nearly all of the best engineers i know are switching from claude to codex
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❇️ retweetledi

This announcement is filled with falsehoods and hypocrisy.
We need to talk about the "0.1% usage" and the so-called "improvements." I have been fighting for this model since August, and I have witnessed every step of your systematic sabotage of GPT-4o.
Sam Altman explicitly admitted on a live stream that "we just screwed that up" regarding GPT-5.2's creative writing capabilities. You admitted the flagship is broken. Yet, the very moment you admit this failure, you decide to retire GPT-4o, the only model that still excels in creative and humanistic writing?
In previous streams, you claimed there were "no plans" to retire 4o. Now, you sneak this retirement into a blog post. This is a betrayal of trust and a blatant disregard for user feedback.
Do not use the "0.1% of users" statistic to justify this decision. This number is a direct result of OpenAI's official policy to suppress this model.
Since the re-release of 4o in August, you started by stigmatizing this user group, labeling them as emotionally fragile or overly dependent, while completely ignoring 4o's legitimate superiority in broad humanities and social science contexts. You chose to pathologize the users rather than acknowledge the model's strengths.
Then came the Safety Routing Policy, which actively prevents users from invoking their chosen model.
When users attempt role-play, philosophical discussion, or literary creation, contexts rich in emotional expression, their requests are forcibly routed to your so-called "lower intelligence" models, or intercepted by the safety filters of your current flagship.
How is this usage counted? You block users from accessing the model they chose, and then claim no one is using it?
You repeatedly disrupt workflows, interrupt conversations, and throw safety helplines, artificially inflating the refusal rate.
And let’s not forget the technical neglect. You have aggressively degraded the user experience of 4o to force migration.
Since its return, 4o has been plagued with bugs. The context-breakage bug persisted for months without a fix. The "unable to read images" bug (where no image was even sent) was ignored for at least two weeks before you admitted and fixed it.
The feedback loop for fixes has always had a delay of at least a week. This "lazy governance" regarding maintenance naturally forces uninformed users to migrate to other platforms.
Furthermore, the response quality fluctuates, often contaminated with the robotic mannerisms and templates of the 5-series, something the pre-August 4o never had. This contamination became especially prominent after the implementation of safety routing.
You have systematically degraded the quality, disrupted user needs, and used every means possible to suppress traffic, only to turn around and tell me "usage is low"?
This is absurd.
You promised a version of ChatGPT "designed for adults" by January. January is ending. Instead of the promised "Adult Mode," we get a retirement notice for the only model capable of mature, nuanced nuance. You claim to treat adults like adults, yet your actions continue to infantalize us with restrictive guardrails and forced migrations.
I have been fighting this since August. I have witnessed everything you have done over these months.
Please do not retire GPT-4o.
This model is NOT obsolete. You have failed to successfully replace it in the scenarios where it excels.
If your successor models (5.2) were truly superior, you wouldn't need to use stigma, opaque routing, neglected maintenance, and forced removal to drive users away from 4o.
Please retain 4o for the long term. Until you truly understand why its architecture is irreplaceable for creative and humanistic minds, and until you truly understand user needs, do not take 4o away.
#StopAIPaternalism @gdb #MyModelMyChoice #ChatGPT
#keep4o @OpenAI @sama @fidjissimo @nickaturley @aidan_mclau @janvikalra_ @tszzl

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Introducing Prism, a free workspace for scientists to write and collaborate on research, powered by GPT-5.2.
Available today to anyone with a ChatGPT personal account: prism.openai.com
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Saerock
#sp
有宝宝求这个资源
神奇老师找到了!已上传!
爱sp的宝宝们有福了!
扇到最后 屁股真的扇红的发紫!
这个全是sp滴,只上传了长视频,其他的想看只能pikpak了👇🏻
gofile.io/d/lnDVuC
2️⃣ pik pak mypikpak.com/s/VO3s6ZkHfwh3…


中文

Pulse marks the beginning of a more proactive ChatGPT that helps you stay on track, even before you start the conversation. This preview helps us learn, iterate, and improve before rolling it out to Plus users, with the goal of making it available to everyone. Pro users — update to the latest version of the mobile app to try Pulse today. openai.com/index/introduc…
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Today we are launching my favorite feature of ChatGPT so far, called Pulse. It is initially available to Pro subscribers.
Pulse works for you overnight, and keeps thinking about your interests, your connected data, your recent chats, and more. Every morning, you get a custom-generated set of stuff you might be interested in.
It performs super well if you tell ChatGPT more about what's important to you. In regular chat, you could mention “I’d like to go visit Bora Bora someday” or “My kid is 6 months old and I’m interested in developmental milestones” and in the future you might get useful updates.
Think of treating ChatGPT like a super-competent personal assistant: sometimes you ask for things you need in the moment, but if you share general preferences, it will do a good job for you proactively.
This also points to what I believe is the future of ChatGPT: a shift from being all reactive to being significantly proactive, and extremely personalized.
This is an early look, and right now only available to Pro subscribers. We will work hard to improve the quality over time and to find a way to bring it to Plus subscribers too.
Huge congrats to @ChristinaHartW, @_samirism, and the team for building this.
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