![]() ![]() Sydney identifies as “Bing Search”, not an assistant.Sydney is the chat mode of Microsoft Bing search.Consider Bing Chat whose codename is Sydney.Microsoft Bing Chat (aka “Sydney”) prompt in full: ![]() This information was first reported by Kevin Liu on February 9th, and it was later confirmed by other sources such as Ars Technica, Dr Alan Thompson, and Microsoft itself via an article in The Verge. However, with the recent news that “Bing Chat” was alleged to be powered by an upgraded, even more advanced GPT model from OpenAI than that powering the 100-million user-a-day ChatGPT bot, expectations have been extremely high and given Bing a much-needed shot in the arm.īut before we move on to Sydney’s recent, and quite astonishing, reported interactions with journalists and researchers, I want to share the full prompt that Microsoft engineers reportedly used to create Sydney on the new OpenAI model. In case you didn’t know, Bing is Microsoft’s version of Google search, but with just a 2–3% share of the search market versus over 90% for Google (outside of China), it has been a bit of an also-ran in the search space for many years now. If you recall from my last post on “Prompt Engineering”, I mentioned that Stanford University student, Kevin Liu, claimed to have “hacked” (also using prompt engineering techniques) the new Microsoft Bing Chat to reveal its “origin” prompts and the codename, “Sydney”, given to it by Microsoft’s developers. Bing Chat’s Sydney, “Do you believe me? Do you trust me? Do you like me?” Tbh, it’s all getting a little bit weird □ Microsoft Bing Chat has turned out to have some interesting emergent personality traits.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |