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Ronz Co
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Ronz Co
@theronzco
Helping 𝗮𝘀𝗽𝗶𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗰𝗿𝗲𝗮𝘁𝗼𝗿𝘀 gain 𝗰𝗹𝗮𝗿𝗶𝘁𝘆 in life & business and monetize their expertise with a 𝗰𝗼𝗻𝘁𝗲𝗻𝘁-𝗱𝗿𝗶𝘃𝗲𝗻 𝘀𝘆𝘀𝘁𝗲𝗺.
Global Katılım Haziran 2023
458 Takip Edilen717 Takipçiler

@MattForVA Same thoughts and emotions. He has a huge impact on people around the globe.
May he rest in heavenly peace 🕊️
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This one feels different than all other tragedies. I don’t know why, but it does.
I didn’t know Charlie, but it feels like someone close to me was murdered.
Anybody else feel that way?
I just hope this is a pivot point. It feels like it is.
I hope for Charlie’s sake we manifest this tragedy into the moment we realized debates, having decorum, and voting was not how we take our country back.
They will take your job, your possessions, your freedom, your rights, and now they’ve proven they will murder you if you don’t comply.
I know God’s judgement is coming for them, but I want them to feel the pain we’ve all felt for years before they meet him.
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@Riley_Gaines_ I haven't met Charlie, but I've been following him for a couple of years now. He's a great Christian man. I can feel the same emotions from those who loved him, and followed him. Rest in Peace @charliekirk11 . The Lord will continue his mission.
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It’s hard to comprehend the injustice of this, that his children are suddenly without their father.
That his wife is now a widow.
The fact that demons are manifesting to celebrate this horror shows just how effective he was. They might be gloating today… but in the end, good will triumph over evil.
May God be with his family and may this evil act be turned into good.
Rest in peace with the Lord, Charlie Kirk.

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@BlockguardTech Yes, I agree and I believe in the trajectory of this new economic development.
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@theronzco Agreed,
wanderers never truly arrive at somewhere,
Firmness is a complete dream
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@xmentalcoach Oh..hey there. I'm kinda taking a step back for a while...thanks for asking.
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@thedankoe If you can train yourself to start before you’re ready, you’ll outpace 90% of people stuck in their heads.
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It’s true, when people start trusting AI with their biggest decisions, it stops being about tech and starts being about care. That kind of trust has to be earned and protected. The real question is, how do we make sure guidance from AI helps people grow without quietly steering them off course?
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If you have been following the GPT-5 rollout, one thing you might be noticing is how much of an attachment some people have to specific AI models. It feels different and stronger than the kinds of attachment people have had to previous kinds of technology (and so suddenly deprecating old models that users depended on in their workflows was a mistake).
This is something we’ve been closely tracking for the past year or so but still hasn’t gotten much mainstream attention (other than when we released an update to GPT-4o that was too sycophantic).
(This is just my current thinking, and not yet an official OpenAI position.)
People have used technology including AI in self-destructive ways; if a user is in a mentally fragile state and prone to delusion, we do not want the AI to reinforce that. Most users can keep a clear line between reality and fiction or role-play, but a small percentage cannot. We value user freedom as a core principle, but we also feel responsible in how we introduce new technology with new risks.
Encouraging delusion in a user that is having trouble telling the difference between reality and fiction is an extreme case and it’s pretty clear what to do, but the concerns that worry me most are more subtle. There are going to be a lot of edge cases, and generally we plan to follow the principle of “treat adult users like adults”, which in some cases will include pushing back on users to ensure they are getting what they really want.
A lot of people effectively use ChatGPT as a sort of therapist or life coach, even if they wouldn’t describe it that way. This can be really good! A lot of people are getting value from it already today.
If people are getting good advice, leveling up toward their own goals, and their life satisfaction is increasing over years, we will be proud of making something genuinely helpful, even if they use and rely on ChatGPT a lot. If, on the other hand, users have a relationship with ChatGPT where they think they feel better after talking but they’re unknowingly nudged away from their longer term well-being (however they define it), that’s bad. It’s also bad, for example, if a user wants to use ChatGPT less and feels like they cannot.
I can imagine a future where a lot of people really trust ChatGPT’s advice for their most important decisions. Although that could be great, it makes me uneasy. But I expect that it is coming to some degree, and soon billions of people may be talking to an AI in this way. So we (we as in society, but also we as in OpenAI) have to figure out how to make it a big net positive.
There are several reasons I think we have a good shot at getting this right. We have much better tech to help us measure how we are doing than previous generations of technology had. For example, our product can talk to users to get a sense for how they are doing with their short- and long-term goals, we can explain sophisticated and nuanced issues to our models, and much more.
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@theronzco I’ve found that plans can sometimes kill the fun. Just wing it.
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@WhitLynnCooper Yeah, accountability’s tough, like facing a mirror you’d rather avoid. But owning it sets you free.
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@theronzco Sometimes fear of accountability keeps us from moving forward, but it’s so worth it in the end.
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