The OpenAI group asserted that the ‘GPTs’ function might lessen the burden of entering intricate prompts for paying customers.
According to a blog post published by Open AI on November 6, users of the AI system ChatGPT can now train their own generative pre-trained transformers (GPTs). This implies that users no longer have to type in long strings of commands into the chat window to accomplish a variety of tasks; instead, they may construct their own ChatGPT apps to do so.
OpenAI discovered that many users were keeping text files to shape how ChatGPT responded to questions. These “power users” had to copy and paste this text every time they launched ChatGPT before they could begin working. The developers implemented GPTs to address this issue, explaining:
“Many power users maintain a list of well designed prompts and instruction sets, painstakingly copying them into ChatGPT. GPTs can now automate all of those processes.”
Users on the “ChatGPT Plus” and Enterprise plans can use the updated functionality. Currently, there is no cost-free option.
The new GPT shop, according to OpenAI, will launch “later this month.” Like an app store for mobile devices, this marketplace will let programmers publish and sell their own custom GPTs to users. When the shop opens, only “verified builders” will be able to put GPTs there, and the company promises that it has developed “new systems” to safeguard users’ data and safety.
Users can also disclose their GPTs publicly if they wish others to be able to utilize them, the statement noted. Furthermore, businesses may design “internal-only” GPTs for use by select teams or employees.
The essay claims that several companies, including Amgen, Bain, and Square, have started utilizing GPTs to develop marketing campaigns, support customer service representatives, and train new engineers.
Reuters cites data from SimilarWeb, showing that ChatGPT has more than 180 million users, making it one of the most popular AI chat applications. However, rivals like as Google’s Bard and Anthropic’s Claude 2 are getting stronger. Elon Musk revealed on November 5 that he developed an artificial intelligence chat tool he calls “Grok.”