Who in their right mind is using free ChatGPT through that shitty no good web interface of theirs, that can barely handle two queries-and-replies before grinding down to a halt? Surely everyone is using the pay-as-you-go API keys and any one of the alternative ffrontends or integrations?
And, IIRC, pay-as-you-go API requests are explicitly not used for training data. I'm sad GPT-4 isn't there yet - except for those who won the waitlist lottery.
It's really funny to see these types of comments. I would assume a vast majority of users are using the Web interface, particularly in a corporate context where an account for the API could take ages or not be accepted.
If people were smart and performed according to best practices, articles like this one would not be necessary.
I mean, if you're using a free web interface in corporate context, you may just as well use a paid API with your personal account - either way, you're using it of your own volition, and not as approved by your employer. And getting API keys to ChatGPT equivalent (i.e. GPT-3.5) takes... a minute, maybe less.
I am honestly confused how people can use this thing with the interface OpenAI runs. The app has been near-unusable for me, for months, on every device I tried it on.
> and any one of the alternative ffrontends or integrations?
And what sort of understanding do you have with the alternative frontends/integrations about how they handle your API keys and data? This might be a better solution for a variety of reasons but it doesn't automatically mean your data is being handled any better or worse than by openai.com
I wonder what the distribution of tokens / sec at OpenAI is between the free ChatGPT, paid ChatGPT, and APIs. I’d have to think the free interface is getting slammed. Quite the scaling project, and still nowhere near peaking.
And, IIRC, pay-as-you-go API requests are explicitly not used for training data. I'm sad GPT-4 isn't there yet - except for those who won the waitlist lottery.