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This is a complicated situation, so let me break it down. ChatGPT has a share feature that lets you easily send info to another user with a link. But apparently the info in these semi-personal discussions with the "AI" chatbot was posted somewhere that Google could crawl and index. And this allowed it to be easily searchable with the very basic Google instruction, "site:chatgpt.com/share." Even though the queries searchable this way were probably only a tiny fraction of the massive volume of what ChatGPT users actually generated, it still had some, ahem, interesting things to search through.
ChatGPT's owner OpenAI was, predictably, not thrilled that such a huge volume of searches were going through, potentially including lots of semi-personal information. To be fair, users had to manually make these posts shared in the first place, and the warning "Anyone with the URL will be able to view your shared chat" appeared each time the function was used, and then also had to opt-in to it being shared with search engines. Nonetheless, they shut it down double-quick.
According to a post on Twitter/X from OpenAI's co-chief information security officer Dane Stu
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The WEI was introduced in Windows Vista. It provided a numerical assessment of a computer's hardware and software performance on a scale of 1 to 10.
While the direct display feature for the WEI was removed in Windows 8.1, the tool still exists in Windows 11, and you can access it the way I'm going to show you below.
Why would you want to use it? Well, figuratively speaking, it lets you put on your system administrator's cap and analyze the performance of components like your CPU and storage drive. With the numerical performance values you get, you can more easily decide whether you need to upgrade anything.
Interpreting the WEI is easy: Scores closer to 10 indicate a faster and more responsive PC. It's very difficult to get 10/10, so you should consider anything in the 9s as exceptional.
What to do:
In Windows 11 Search type CMD, to access the command prompt.
Now type the command winsat formal. You should see a process run that indicates the PC is analyzing the system hardware. If it doesn't, retype the command.
Now navigate to C:\Windows\Performance\WinSAT\DataStore and open the html file with today's date.
Find WinSPR in the data listed in the html file and view the WEI info below it.
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Speaking Thursday during a conference call with investors following Amazon's second-quarter earnings report, CEO Andy Jassy boasted that the roughly one million users in the Alexa early preview program "really like the experience" and "recognize how much better it is than what it was before." (My own Alexa experience was a bit more nuanced.)
Asked about the possibility of Amazon "tapping into…advertising" with Alexa , Jassy noted that Alexa offers a "delightful shopping experience" and that "there will be opportunities as people are engaging [in] more multiturn conversations to have advertising play a role to help people find discovery and also as a lever to drive revenue."
Then Jassy went a little further, adding that "over time…as we keep adding functionality that there could be some sort of subscription element beyond what there is today."
So, what's Jassy saying here? Is there a possibility that in the future, Alexa might give a "sponsored" answer to a question, similar to the sponsored results you see at the top of search results?
And that leads to another possibility in terms of a "subscription element beyond what there is today." Might there eventually be an ad-free tier for Alexa , and if so, would that put Prime subscribers in the position of having to pay more for an Alexa free from ads, similar to what's going on now with Prime Video? (It was TechCrunch that raised the specter of an ad-free Alexa tier.)
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