HNNewShowAskJobs
Built with Tanstack Start
Leak confirms OpenAI is preparing ads on ChatGPT for public roll out(bleepingcomputer.com)
641 points by fleahunter 21 hours ago | 572 comments

https://x.com/btibor91/status/1994714152636690834

https://xcancel.com/btibor91/status/1994714152636690834

  • aurareturn20 hours ago

    - ~1 billion users in just 3 years

    - Extremely personal data on users

    - Novel way of introducing and learning more about sponsored products

    - Strong branding for non-techie people (most normal people don't know what Claude or Gemini are)

    - An app that is getting more and more addictive/indispensable

    I think OpenAI is going to kill it in ads eventually. This is why Meta and Google went all in on AI. Their lucrative digital ad business is in an existential threat.

    I think people who kept saying there is no moat in AI is about to be shocked at how strong of a moat there actually is for ChatGPT.

    All free LLM chat apps will need to support ads or they will eventually die due to worse unit economics or run out of funding.

    PS. Sam just said OpenAI's revenue will finish at $20b this year. 6x growth from 2024. Zero revenue from non-sub users. What do you guys think their revenue will end up in 2026?

    • afavour18 hours ago |parent

      > most normal people don't know what Claude or Gemini are

      In think the point is that they don’t need to know what Gemini is, they just need to know Google, which they most definitely do.

      IMO ads rollout won’t be as simple as you’re describing it. A lot of people have switched from Google search to AI specifically because it isn’t filled with SEO, ad filled nonsense. So they’ll need to tread very, very carefully to introduce it without alienating customers. Not to mention mollifying advertisers who are nervous what their product will be shown alongside and OpenAI will probably struggle to offer iron clad guarantees about it. And people generally speaking don’t like ads. If competitors like Google are able to hold out longer with no ads (they certainly aren’t wanting for ad display surfaces) they might be able to pull users away from OpenAI.

      IMO pivoting to ads is a sign of core weakness for OpenAI. Anyone trying to set up their own ad network in 2025 has to reckon with Google and Meta, the two absolute behemoths of online ads. And both also happen to be major competitors of OpenAI. If they need ads that’s a problem.

      • SketchySeaBeast18 hours ago |parent

        I can't wait for the instructions to start having ads embedded.

        2. Place the turkey in your GE Two in One Oven set to 350, cooking for 10 minutes a lbs.

        3. While waiting for your Turkey to finish cooking, why not have an ice cold Coke Zero? Click here for nearby locations.

        4. Remove Turkey from the oven, let rest for ten minutes while listening to Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars sing "Die with a Smile" on Spotify.

        • scuff3d3 hours ago |parent

          At least those are obvious. Them sneaking ads in that don't look like ads are what I'm more concerned about.

          • jstummbillig23 minutes ago |parent

            That would be illegal.

            I understand that there are a lot of strong opinions and open questions about OpenAI behavior – the amount of vigilantism is quite staggering – but if what they do is found to be clearly illegal by courts around the world, they will have to pay very hefty fines. Disguising ads is one such move. That's just not a winning business.

            • adrianN16 minutes ago |parent

              How much can you bias training to favor certain products before it becomes illegal? That seems like a similar question to "how much linear algebra do you have to do to copyrighted works before copyright doesn't apply anymore".

          • mirekrusinan hour ago |parent

            Trueman Show but without expensive dome.

        • a4isms17 hours ago |parent

          This is where Tesla has a key advantage. Optimus can walk you to the kitchen to look for a Coke Zero. Google and OpenAI cannot compete with this.

          • serf17 hours ago |parent

            this is one of those HN style comments where business acumen and pertinent sarcasm are wholly indistinguishable .

            • a4isms17 hours ago |parent

              Poe's Law notwithstanding, I find it hard to believe that anyone would think I was making a good faith business acumen observation. If Optimus walks you to the kitchen to get a coke, what's Tesla's business model? Charge by the nanosecond for compute time?

              • neilv15 hours ago |parent

                Purchase/lease access to the hardware, subscription for the necessary online connectivity, and microtransactions for each actual use of it (ostensibly because of cloud compute, and that also means surveillance data is captured and monetized).

              • senordevnyc15 hours ago |parent

                Tesla doesn’t need a business model, they’re a meme stock.

                • LanceJones8 hours ago |parent

                  Perhaps. I suppose the biggest in history then? $1.4T valuation and 60% of shares held by non-meme institutions (like pension funds, S&P tracking ETFs, etc) when you factor out insiders.

                  • bdangubic6 hours ago |parent

                    “The market can remain irrational longer than …” - John Maynard Keynes.

                • wnmurphy2 hours ago |parent

                  Not saying that the stock isn't a meme stock, but my car literally drives itself everywhere. Tesla has many business models.

              • staticman216 hours ago |parent

                The robot suggested a coke zero because it was paid to by the Coca-Cola Company. Now you'll need to buy more coke zero to replace what you drank.

                • a4isms15 hours ago |parent

                  The business model for Tesla and xAI is actually very simple and superior to OpenAI and Google's. No, this is not satire:

                  The business model is that his companies are meme stocks, and controlling social media means controlling meme stocks. The business model is also that his companies require corporate socialism, and controlling social media means influencing government policy.

                  He can talk about AI driving cars, but that's yesterday's news. Today, his business model for AI is to put his finger on the scale and influence society to help him become richer. AI is threatening to replace search, but in a way it's also threatening part of what social media provides, namely the ability to guide discourse at scale.

                  What's easier: Getting his personal board to give him a trillion dollars, and shoring up public support for that with bias in his AI products and on X? Or building a trillion-dollar business?

                  Elon Musk's business model for AI is actually quite easy to understand.

                  • dreamcompiler8 hours ago |parent

                    And just like all meme stocks and so-called stablecoins, it'll work until it doesn't. The fall will be dramatic.

                    • bdangubic6 hours ago |parent

                      it won’t be. the same sane argument was that “robotaxi” fall will be dramatic but it wasn’t, Musk, like Trump, is a master at manipulating masses and when thing du jour inevitably fails he’ll just pivot on an earnings call (and on “X” along the way) how “thing du jour is yesterday’s news” and he’s onto “next big thing” - data center on Jupiter that will replace all earth’s data centers or something like that :)

                • beefnugs5 hours ago |parent

                  So lets see a $60k robot, lets say the whole economy crashes and money means nothing so they just call it $30k for kicks and giggles. Super cheap power since elon owns all the land now, he can have a tiny nuclear reactor every few house lengths. So $1 a day for power : 30365 / 365 days a year is about $80 a day in the first year, or maybe $40 a day assuming the reactors dont melt down for 2 years. So that is about 2 forced cokes down your throat per hour, 4 if you are a "known criminal" who is being robo-babysat. And that is still zero profit for elon because he has to shuffle all his assets around to the next farce of a fucking company

                • DonHopkins7 hours ago |parent

                  But the damned robot keeps drinking all my Coke Zero!

              • dr_kretyn7 hours ago |parent

                I'm still unsure whether you're Musk's fanboy or making a joke.

            • iaw17 hours ago |parent

              Thank you for this comment, there is no way I could eloquently explain my read on the comment you're replying to the way you did.

        • hyperadvanced15 hours ago |parent

          Drink verification can

        • ponector16 hours ago |parent

          There should be also mentioned brand of the kitchenette supplier, utensils and every food component with Amazon wishlist ready to order.

        • prymitive14 hours ago |parent

          You’ll wish it was that and not “a word from our sponsor NordVPN” or scammy crypto investments

          • gs1713 hours ago |parent

            It'll be hilarious (in a tragic way) if Google adds ads to Gemini using their existing platform and suddenly it becomes a scammer in the middle of chats.

        • dzonga11 hours ago |parent

          there was a black mirror episode regarding something similar

        • ekropotin14 hours ago |parent

          It was in Black Mirror

        • inetknght16 hours ago |parent

          Missed opportunity for brands of turkeys

        • sandworm10115 hours ago |parent

          It wont be that obvious. It will explain to you the dangers of doing your own cooking, the number killed by food poisioning each year, then suggest something from doordash instead. Or it will suggest you eat something faster, like pop tarts, so you can spend less time cooking and more time interacting with your AI buddy.

      • wiz21c17 hours ago |parent

        > So they’ll need to tread very, very carefully to introduce it without alienating customers.

        every single platform since the 1990's has introduced ads. My kids find it totally normal to have them. Believe me, if you train (!) people to accept ads, they will soon think it's normal.

        And besides, if ChatGPT goes with ads, Google will follow directly. So the users won't have the choice anymore.

        But ok, if I have to pay for a service without ads, then let it be. Paying for a service is normal too.

        • ryandrake15 hours ago |parent

          Don't worry, you'll pay for the service and get ads. It's the inevitable end-state of these kinds of services.

          • rubidium5 hours ago |parent

            Amazon prime video showed us that.

            First no ads. Then ad free if you pay extra. Then “ad free” except half the shows have a “this show requires ads” bs and still have ads. Scummy flea ridden advertisers at their core.

        • com2kid14 hours ago |parent

          Counter point - my kid hates ads. I've worked to keep them away from him and whenever they do sneak through he gets irritated at them.

          • tasuki11 hours ago |parent

            Mine does too. I make sure there are no ads on the screens, but ads in print are harder to adblock. She hasn't seen too many, yet at four years old could distinguish an ad in a kid's magazine in under a second.

        • afavour10 hours ago |parent

          > if ChatGPT goes with ads, Google will follow directly

          Eventually. But Google has an absolute ton of places to put ads today and are profitable enough that they can subsidise their AI operation much longer than OpenAI can. If it’s a competitive advantage to remain ad-less they have the ability to do it.

          • siva79 hours ago |parent

            remaining ad-less isn't a competitive advantage for google.. advertisers want the use the best medium available to reach customers and clearly ai chatbots are better suited for that than the old web of google search. openai has reached the critical user base where they could easily replace google for advertisers.

            • bpt38 hours ago |parent

              > clearly ai chatbots are better suited for that than the old web of google search

              Why is this clearly the case?

              • razingedenan hour ago |parent

                if you think about it, the current advertising paradigm infers things about you, from cookies and trackers, from data brokers etc (to show you “relevant” ads.

                and things you “like” or “follow” or comment on , or maybe even just making guesses at your race, job, income, sexual orientation, politics etc based on who youre “friends” with.

                all of thats on the decline: social media engagement on legacy platforms is down, people are blocking cookies and or javascript. california is making an opt out tool for data brokers (and its going live in a month or two)

                people have hours long conversations with chatgpt about things like what theyre working on. so it might know your job, talents, skills. things planning (aspirations) , things you asked it how to cook, or whats wrong with them medically. or maybe theyve dished to it about other personal stuff they thought was 100% in confidence up until now.

                then now that its “private”, advertisers cant get backlash for showing ads next to controversial content, or people who are “supposed to be cancelled”. it removes a pressure point for accidentally (or deliberately) displaying their content somewhere its inappropriate or problematic for the brand— by hiding the interaction (and ads) in a “private” chat—

                just for starters.

                were at a point where publishers are nagging about our popup blockers and having hissy fits or refusing to load the page until their ads are whitelisted. so you know enough people are doing it to impact peoples business models now.

                ill personly disable JS altogether for sites that do that but a lot of people just wont return.

                its a dying media the way it exists.

                so now all these ad providers (meta, google, twitter) are in on AI . and here comes openAI for all three of their lunches.

                this just opened my eyes to what is at stake here and why its all being shoved down everyones throats. sure i use them, but i also have local models installed id drop them in an instant for if my chats were used to show me ads.

                then just wait for ANY of these two entities to merge and overwhelm your social media feed with the next twenty years of ads full of junk the “AI” learned about you.

        • ViewTrick100216 hours ago |parent

          But many of them have failed to achieve the necessary profitability.

          For example Snapchat, Reddit etc.

      • wayeq17 hours ago |parent

        > So they’ll need to tread very, very carefully to introduce it without alienating customers.

        I'm certain the ads will be introduced in an easily identifiable and ignorable way. People will acclimate, user behavior will be analyzed, and over time the dial will ever so slowly be turned up to optimize for draining as much attention and money from the consumer as possible.

        • LogicFailsMe17 hours ago |parent

          You'll just need to run a small local model to filter out the ads. And they just become another one of those silly arms races between the ad makers and the ad blockers and we all burn more electricity.

          • luckman21216 hours ago |parent

            but AI will calculate precisely the optimal amount of electricity to waste. so, win win

      • falcor8418 hours ago |parent

        Yeah, I saw several people who only first tried AI chats on Google's new "AI Mode", which uses Gemini, but doesn't mention it anywhere.

        • A4ET8a8uTh0_v218 hours ago |parent

          I am not exactly a great example ( exposure to work model, ollama, local models play ) and I actually liked gemini upon try in google search ( which is amusingly now banned at work ), but the nice quickly fell into not nice, when it started giving me weird pushback on operation paperclip book ( I am assuming chapter discussing tabun triggered something. This is my only real problem with gemini. By comparison, I am not running into guardrails with gpt nearly as often.

        • lxgr18 hours ago |parent

          Even “AI mode” isn’t mainstream yet, at least in my observation.

          “AI summaries” are, but they seem to be powered by an even weaker model.

      • neximo6418 hours ago |parent

        > most normal people don't know what Claude or Gemini are

        That's actually changed a while ago.

        • state_less17 hours ago |parent

          Chatgpt is a proprietary eponym[1], like kleenex, or Google for search. That's a relatively strong attractor based on their first mover status. I nevertheless use tissues, and search engines like brave search, sometimes duckduckgo, and claude or openrouter for my LLM models.

          I think there are too many good alternatives for Chatgpt to turn the screws too hard on their users, but we'll see where it settles out. As usual, the most vulnerable will be squeezed the hardest (the ignorant and tech feeble). Hopefully competition and some oversight will keep the wolves at bay.

          The finance people were chatting about the OpenAI's ad play a while back, glad to see it finally dawning on this crowd.

          1. Not all jurisdictions have granted OpenAI the Chatgpt trademark.

          • cameronh9016 hours ago |parent

            I think I hear as many people calling it ChatGBT or ChatGTP as ChatGPT.

            • DANmode7 hours ago |parent

              None of which, when searched, will lead the user to Claude, Qwen, et al.

              Just OpenAI and ChatGPT.

              So what’s your point?

            • state_less15 hours ago |parent

              "Oh no it's GPT, a Generative Pretrained Transformer shaped into chat responses."

          • FarmerPotato6 hours ago |parent

            Chachapita

        • lxgr18 hours ago |parent

          Claude? I’d be extremely surprised.

          Gemini? As gemini.google.com or as the thoroughly mediocre “AI summaries” on top of Google Search results?

          • adrianwaj2 hours ago |parent

            Yeah, Google should have got gemini.com and gemini.ai before settling on that name, just like Claude. Instead they go to the same crypto service. It would've cleared up some confusion.

          • bigbinary18 hours ago |parent

            Claude has been aggressively advertising on Facebook, Instagram, and Reddit, and the ads have been much more general use than just the code benefits. They’re definitely no ChatGPT, but they’re not an unknown player.

            • caymanjim18 hours ago |parent

              You're only seeing those ads because the ad algorithm knows you. My family aren't getting Claude ads. They wouldn't know the first thing about it even if it were explained to them.

            • lanyard-textile17 hours ago |parent

              From the advertisements I’ve seen, only in the bay area, I honestly wouldn’t know Claude “competed” with ChatGPT unless I knew of it beforehand.

              For me that’s mostly because every AI startup is promising the moon on their billboards, lol.

          • mrbombastic18 hours ago |parent

            Yeah my father who codes occasionally asked me what the best AI for coding was and he had never even heard of claude so I would be very surprised if your average person knows it.

            • yesimahuman18 hours ago |parent

              They absolutely do not. It took getting out of tech a few years to realize how hilariously out of touch we can be in this industry

        • kevinsync17 hours ago |parent

          Weirdly, I think Perplexity is getting a lot of mainstream name recognition because of podcasts. All the big slop pods like Rogan, Theo Von, etc are sponsored by Perplexity and the hosts constantly name check it by asking to “look stuff up on Perplexity”. Honestly pretty smart marketing all things considered.

        • DANmode7 hours ago |parent

          Disagree.

          Wait - are you in California?

      • onion2k17 hours ago |parent

        they just need to know Google, which they most definitely do

        The way that Google is rolling out AI is confusing, and I imagine a lot of people who can access Gemini don't actually know they can or how to use it. Among those that do know, many won't know what it's capable of and will believe that they need to pay for a service like ChatGPT in order to get what they want.

        • stOneskull31 minutes ago |parent

          i'd guess co-pilot or bing. so many people use microsoft edge and office, not to mention windows itself.

      • Verdex14 hours ago |parent

        > IMO pivoting to ads is a sign of core weakness for OpenAI.

        Yeah, I've had the same thought for a while now. You don't sell investors on an endeavor for 10s of billions of dollars with the endgame being "sell ads". If that was the endgame then there are a lot less resource and capital intensive ways to get to it.

        Given all of the discourse of "you need this new tech in your life to continue to participate in society", I would not have expected them to need to stand on the roadside trying to get people to buy low cost fireworks. It smacks of going through the sofa for loose change so you can make rent.

        And if they had something impressive coming down the pipeline I would think they could get someone to spot them a few billions yet, unless the billionaire/megacorp economy is really that tapped out.

        • randyrand14 hours ago |parent

          > You don't sell investors on an endeavor for 10s of billions of dollars with the endgame being "sell ads".

          Google is a multi trillion dollar ads company. So is meta.

          Don’t underestimate ads.

      • Invictus015 hours ago |parent

        This is the curlftpfs comment all over again

      • Zetaphor18 hours ago |parent

        And yet most of the people I know, including many technical ones, default to ChatGPT before Google's AI Studio. Google has general brand awareness, but ChatGPT has become the Bandaid or Kleenex of AI

        • afavour18 hours ago |parent

          > ChatGPT has become the Bandaid or Kleenex of AI

          I agree but how many consumers actively purchase Bandaid or Kleenex over cheaper store brands? Becoming a generic term doesn’t always translate to great business. “I’ll put it into chat” could easily end up meaning “enter into Google’s AI prompt” for many people.

        • array_key_first17 hours ago |parent

          Bandaid and Kleenex are commodities. Nobody has a problem using a different, cheaper tissue brand and calling it Kleenex.

          Consumers like chat, not chatGPT. Does it do a chat thing? Good enough for consumers. They'll probably call it chatgpt too.

        • ethmarks18 hours ago |parent

          Fun fact: that's called a generic trademark

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generic_trademark

          • Y_Y18 hours ago |parent

            When you call your product "(Chat) Generative Pretrained Transformer" then I don't think you have a great defense against genericisation.

            The legal history of these is interesting, lots of household names have lost their trademarks, and lots of seemingly generic names are still trademarked. This way to the rabbit hole -> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_generic_and_genericize...

          • kccqzy17 hours ago |parent

            OpenAI does worse than that. It tried to make GPT a trademark but USPTO rejected it. So it’s not even a trademark let alone a generic trademark.

            https://tsdr.uspto.gov/documentviewer?caseId=sn97733259&docI...

    • materielle18 hours ago |parent

      I think investors would certainly love this. So why hasn’t it already happened?

      My guess: they would lose a ton of cultural cachet.

      Turning OpenAI into an ads business is basically admitting that AGI isn’t coming down the pipeline anytime soon. Yes, I know people will make some cost-based argument that ads + agi is perfectly logical.

      But that’s not how people will perceive things, and OpenAI knows this. And I think the masses have a point: if we are really a few years away from AGI replacing the entire labor force, then there’s surely higher margin businesses they can engage in compared to ads. Especially since they are allegedly a non-profit.

      After Google and Facebook, nobody is buying the “just a few ads to fund operating costs” argument either.

      • emp1734417 hours ago |parent

        Yup, it’s essentially an admission of failure. I think the people who were expecting AI to improve exponentially are disappointed by its current state, where it’s basically just a useful tool to assist workers in some highly specific fields.

        • JumpCrisscross10 hours ago |parent

          > it’s essentially an admission of failure

          A multibillion dollar failure is fine by investors. Altman hasn’t been peddling the AGI BS to them. That’s aimed at the public and policymakers.

        • kjkjadksj17 hours ago |parent

          Highly specific fields? They are trying to get you to reach for ai when an emailed “ok, thanks” would do. They want you to lose your ability to write and formulate thoughts without the tool. Then it is really over. That is the golden goose. Not a couple data scientists.

      • lazide18 hours ago |parent

        Aka you need them deep enough into the trap they can’t escape, before you trigger it.

        • smallmancontrov18 hours ago |parent

          Yes and there are layers. Remember when google ads had yellow backgrounds? I'm sure OpenAI will find a way to do ads "ethically"... for a while, until people get comfortable, and that's when they will start to make ChatGPT increasingly manipulative.

          • lazide17 hours ago |parent

            Gotta make that line go up and to the right!

            • smallmancontrov15 hours ago |parent

              > The goals of the advertising business model do not always correspond to providing quality search to users.

              - Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page, The Anatomy of a Large-Scale Hypertextual Web Search Engine

        • SketchySeaBeast18 hours ago |parent

          Can anyone explain to me what ChatGPT does that traps people? I get the value as tools, I like using copilot, but ChatGPT doesn't offer me value that any other LLM can't. Given that everyone is quickly rolling "AI" into their own stuff, I don't see what's ChatGPT's killer app. If anything, I think Gemini is better positioned to capture the general user market.

          • lanyard-textile17 hours ago |parent

            The branding is so strong and it works well enough (I’d say, according to the perception of most people) that it’s just the first “obvious” choice.

            Akin to nobody getting fired for choosing AWS, nobody would think poorly of you using ChatGPT.

            I don’t think Claude has that same presence yet.

            Google has a reputation for being a risk to develop with, and I think they flopped on marketing for general users. It’s hard to compete with “ChatGPT” where there’s a perceived call to action right in the name; You don’t really know what Gemini is for until it’s explained.

          • lazide17 hours ago |parent

            They make it a habit to use them, by offloading that part of their thinking/process to them. It’s similar to Google Maps, or even Google itself.

            When was the last time you went to an actual physical library, for instance? Or pulled out a paper map?

            Gemini is a competitor, yes. But most people still go to Google at this point, even if there are a ton of competitors.

            That is what the race is about (in large part), who can become ‘the norm’.

            • ewoodrich12 hours ago |parent

              I also wouldn't underestimate Google's ability to nudge regular users towards whichever AI surface they want to promote. My highly non-technical mom recently told me she started using Google's "AI Mode" or whatever it's called for most of her searches (she says she likes how it can search/compare multiple sites for browsing house listings and stuff).

              She doesn't really install apps and never felt a need to learn a new tool like "ChatGPT" but the transition from regular Google search to "AI Search" felt really natural and also made it easy to switch back to regular search if it wasn't useful for specific types of searches.

              It definitely reduces cognitive load for an average user not needing to switch between multiple apps/websites to lookup hours/reviews via Google Maps, search for "facebook.com" to navigate to a site and now run AI searches all in the same familiar places on her phone. So I think Google is still pretty "sticky" despite ChatGPT being a buzzword everyone hears now that they caught up to OpenAI in terms of model capability/features.

            • pxc16 hours ago |parent

              > When was the last time you went to an actual physical library

              My eyesight is making paper books harder and harder to read, so I don't go to libraries and bookstores as much as I used to. But I think libraries are still relatively popular with families, because they're sites of various community activities as well as safe, quiet places to let kids roam and entertain themselves while the parents are nearby.

              When I was a kid, my parents went to the library much more often than they do now, because they were taking me and my sister there. And then we would all get books before we came home.

              Not saying you're entirely wrong, but there's a significant part of this that is "changing rhythms of life as we age", not just "changing times".

              • lazide15 hours ago |parent

                It used to be, people went to the library to look things up, and as a primary source for finding information they needed. Not just as a community center.

                That is my point.

            • SketchySeaBeast17 hours ago |parent

              > Gemini is a competitor, yes. But most people still go to Google at this point, even if there are a ton of competitors.

              Yeah, that's my point. If Google is good enough I don't think people are going to want to do those extra steps, just as in your google maps example. There might be better services out there, but google maps are just too convenient.

      • beefnugs4 hours ago |parent

        It also is impossible to work properly: either they also screwup the entire API to break everyones programmatic access to coding and regular apps, or else everyone just starts making wrappers around the API to make without-ad-chatbots

        • hattmall4 hours ago |parent

          Why would they need ads on API though, API is paid usage. They just need a few years of scaling for it to be profitable. Some models are already a net profit on API usage.

      • roboror18 hours ago |parent

        I agree but even if AGI is possible within 5-10 years it must be hard to justify maintaining or even increasing this level of burn for much longer.

    • sfifs5 hours ago |parent

      If there's one thing the history of mass internet servuces teaches us, it is that people switch to platforms with superior product/experience in an instant.

      Remember Lycos, Yahoo, & Hotmail? They all had strong userbases for their time who switched in an instant to Google Search & Gmail.

      Even with network effects, it is very difficult to compete without outright superiority - remember Orkut, MySpace, Google Plus or even Facebook? Meta made the right decision buying Instagram and WhatsApp instead of trying to sustain Facebook.

      There are no lock-ins in Chat assistants at all and no network effects. All evidence suggests now cutting edge high performance models are mostly coming out of Google, Anthropic etc and high efficiency models are coming out of China. ChatGPT also appears to have a disadvantage in the talent war - mostly because talent seems to not like to work with the management.

      Also almost no one I know uses ChatGPT now as their primary AI assistant now because they feel the quality of answers from others are simply superior (I check case by case) and the same seems to hold in more formal tests in AI enabled product development. Even Microsoft has started hedging bets with Anthropic.

      OpenAI really really needs to focus on outright superiority or it's going to be interesting to see how the financial shakeout is going to play.

      • doctorpangloss4 hours ago |parent

        Nah, people using Yahoo are still using it today. What happened was the growth of new users of the Internet in general was so massive, T+1 cohort’s early adopters outnumbered T cohort’s majority. the better product won, it’s just that the friction of switching didn’t matter. Switchers didn’t matter.

        • the_pwner22411 minutes ago |parent

          On one hand, true, my mom still uses Yahoo. But email has a strong network effect - you need to update everyone & every service who has your @yahoo address. Switching does happen there are no network effects. Nobody uses Mapquest or Ask Jeeves.

    • helsinkiandrewan hour ago |parent

      > All free LLM chat apps will need to support ads or they will eventually die due

      That’s the issue OpenAI has: Gemini is “free” with google search and other google services. If Apple get their act together they can provide a “privacy respecting” AI free with every iPhone.

      I’ve recently switched from OpenAI as my daily ‘helper’ chatbot to Gemini (I’ve done it with Claude in the past and still use that for coding) and don’t miss ChatGPT. Sure each has quirks and one will release a new version and it becomes the best LLM briefly but to the majority of public and businesses they are interchangeable and the winner is the one that can deliver the functionality for free (because it’s paid for by another service) or into an existing product.

    • knowriju3 hours ago |parent

      Would be quite hilarious if the first two companies to buy As space on ChatGPT is Anthropic and Google. Specially hilarious, since that's exactly how TikTok got all their initial traction from Meta Ads.

      • 0xDEAFBEAD2 hours ago |parent

        "Hey ChatGPT, these ads are annoying, how do I get rid of them?"

        "Here's a reply from our sponsor Anthropic: [...]"

    • lenkite19 hours ago |parent

      Only a short matter of time before agentic tools start serving ads too - paying user or not. You want to refactor your codebase ? No issue - taking 30 seconds - please view this ad meanwhile.

      • mmoll19 hours ago |parent

        You won’t just be viewing an ad, you will have to actively engage in a minute long sales talk with the LLM.

        • placatedmayhem19 hours ago |parent

          In my head, it'll be like the high pressure timeshare sales pitches or the dreaded car sales transactions, where they pull out all the tricks to convince you to buy something you don't actually want or need, regardless of whether you can afford it.

          • simianparrot18 hours ago |parent

            “That’s a great point about your finances. But did you know this company offers credit to someone in your position for only this low interest? I can apply on your behalf if you just sign this statement”

        • teeray17 hours ago |parent

          “We’ll finish up your feature soon. In the meantime, have you considered a timeshare in Vegas?”

      • LastTrain18 hours ago |parent

        It’s worse than that. It will be more akin to ad placement in movies, except in this case it will slip this proprietary library into the suggested solution instead of that one. Or embed ads in the solution code.

        • soared12 hours ago |parent

          Gemini kind of already does this. I use builder in AI studio and it tends to use Gemini in places where other solutions make more sense. Last week I needed users to input their address, validate it, and geo code it. Rather than using google maps APIs (way cheaper, free tier) it used Gemini to do it.

        • tcoff9117 hours ago |parent

          I think getting a model to do this without hurting alignment significantly will be very difficult.

        • sidrag2216 hours ago |parent

          eh, maybe for the super vibey tools. I can't imagine anyone who wants to maintain the trust of devs would do this, they would so quickly pivot to something else, its not like the general public, where AI == chatgpt in their mind.

      • isodev18 hours ago |parent

        Why stop there? You want to refactor your codebase? Sure, but you need to adopt this dependency and this cloud service.

        Mixing Ads or sponsorships to influence LLMs is a really, really bad idea. Especially when they're competing with Search ... which means that for some, "AIs" are the only window into the world when looking something up.

        • fn-mote18 hours ago |parent

          > Sure, but you need to adopt this dependency and this cloud service.

          THIS.

          Asked to make an app using AWS? “I can do that, but have you considered the lower lifetime costs of using Azure? I can generate a configuration for AWS, Azure, or produce a price comparison table. Let me know which you prefer.”

          • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

            Absolutely no business with any real money is going to be swayed to use one cloud provider over the other based on one vibe coded app.

            There is so much other stuff that goes into why business make decisions about any large contract. I’m not in cloud sales. But I venture just close enough to the sun not to get burned

            • isodev17 hours ago |parent

              > Absolutely no business with any real money is going to be swayed

              And what about everyone starting something? Or prototyping? And what if you don't have a choice: pay more or follow our sponsored guidelines?

              This is a dangerous road without proper defences both in terms of legislation and policy (and I mean world-wide, world corps = world laws, not having to go to court in every country lol).

              Also, end users need to be educated about all this because what is to stop John or Jane from uploading their receipts to GPT to make their taxes and ... oops "did you know you can switch insurance to XYZ" or ... AI browser proactively hiding content competing with their partners ... you looking for a healthcare package? The only one available is from our sponsor. Take it or leave it.

              • raw_anon_111116 hours ago |parent

                The tax situation already happens now with Intuit owning both Turbo Tax and CreditKarma to get you to sign up for credit cards.

                If I were prototyping something and found I could do it cheaper somewhere else, I’m not sure I would be upset. I hate ads just for the bad user experience.

                As long as it is clearly an ad and they say they have affiliations. It’s no different than what Google and Amazon does now.

                But ironically enough, I was almost about to pay for Overcast years ago even though the author openly admitted that you didn’t get much of anything for it except for supporting him back then.

                He then added a non slimy self hosted system to buy ads for other podcasts based on the category of podcast you were listening to at that very second (no tracking). I thought that was a great service.

                I think I would actually lean into a tight integration between ChatGPT and something like booking.com[1], AirBNB, GetYourGuide, etc when looking for travel ideas.

                [1] Well I personally wouldn’t because I am not as cost conscience as the average traveler and I value the loyalty programs and status of certain hotel chains and Delta airlines. But most travelers don’t and shouldn’t care.

                But if they let me put in my loyalty numbers and book directly with Hyatt, Hilton and Delta, hell I might pay more for ChatGPT.

            • marcosdumay17 hours ago |parent

              That's a nice, sane world that you live in. How can one get there?

              AFAIK, one wrong person getting an answer like the OP's is more than enough to force a medium sized (dozens of people) business to migrate.

              • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

                How many medium size migrations have you done? Its never that easy even if you are just hosting a bunch of VMs. Let alone if you are using any cloud specific services.

                I have been involved in a few on the periphery working in cloud consulting (first at AWS itself and now an outside company). I actively avoid the “lift and shifts”. I come in for the “modernize” portion.

                https://www.synatic.com/blog/lift-and-shift-vs-modernization

                • marcosdumay15 hours ago |parent

                  Done? none, I wouldn't do it. Undone after it failed, one, and helped some other people in others.

                  You are expecting people to act rationally in a way that will succeed. That's not how a lot of places out there operate.

                  • raw_anon_111114 hours ago |parent

                    I have been either part of or opted out of well over a dozen - I have a policy of never leading “lift and shifts” (and never staff augmentation).

                    Once you actually sit down and come up with a project plan with your PMO, a cloud migration is hardly ever worth the effort unless the destination cloud provider is backing up a shit ton of money for not only operational credits but also for internal AWS Professional Services (where I worked when I was inside AWS) or an outside partner to help (current employer).

                    Hell even certain departments at Amazon would never go through the effort of migrating to AWS from the legacy CDO infrastructure.

                    The risk of regressions, the refactoring, the retraining, the politics, etc are hardly ever worth it.

                    • 12_throw_away7 hours ago |parent

                      > Once you actually sit down and come up with a project plan with your PMO [...] The risk of regressions, the refactoring, the retraining, the politics, etc are hardly ever worth it.

                      You are entirely correct, of course ... except that much of the management class simply does not care about any of those things.

                      Not to mention the sizable contingent of engineers will repeatedly get suckered by the pitch of "Just migrate all of your stuff to [shiny new thing] and all of your [reliable old thing] problems will go away" (a.k.a., "engineers with management potential")

      • tarruda19 hours ago |parent

        Only a matter of time before using coding agents with local LLMs is a viable alternative.

        • fxtentacle18 hours ago |parent

          I’m quite happy with my offline AI solution:

          https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45845049

      • xiphias218 hours ago |parent

        They don't need to make us view ads anymore...just say

        ,,Allow Vercel to use credit card stored by OpenAI''...click to continue refactoring

        • soared12 hours ago |parent

          Stripe already built this out and it’s in ChatGPT. Some merchants let you buy directly in the chat interface, and payment credentials are shared through the chat interface to the store (securely, etc)

      • Ekaros15 hours ago |parent

        How soon will coding agents start injecting paid saas service calls in the code? And when in agentic mode, automatically sing up the coder to them?

      • Eggpants18 hours ago |parent

        It will be like AdWords, pay to have specific token output replaced by your trademark.

        this_variable_is_sponsored_by_coinbase = 42

        I’m just exaggerating … I hope.

      • nerdponx19 hours ago |parent

        Extra convenient because people are already used to these things taking several seconds to respond.

      • solumunus18 hours ago |parent

        I highly doubt this one. These agents are pretty interchangeable, any one of them could decide to not show ads and steal huge market share. Programming is one of the few areas they can actually make gross margin, so ads would be a terrible business decision given the above. The ad revenue from it would be insignificant against the API calls / subscriptions.

      • elemdos19 hours ago |parent

        Maybe that could result in a free tier? If the numbers work out

      • philjohn17 hours ago |parent

        "This bugfix is brought to you by ... Costco"

    • reeredfdfdf19 hours ago |parent

      "I think people who kept saying there is no moat in AI is about to be shocked at how strong of a moat there actually is for ChatGPT."

      I'm not sure that really is the case. Most non-techies I know use ChatGPT far less than they use Google search, let alone various social media apps they're addicted to.

      Perhaps it is a threat to Google search, but I can't see how it's going to be threat to ad revenue from Meta, Youtube etc - the services that are actually addictive due to the content they serve. At least for me there's absolutely nothing addictive about ChatGPT. It's just a tool that helps me solve certain types of problems, not something I enjoy to use.

    • isodev18 hours ago |parent

      > - Extremely personal data on users - Novel way of introducing and learning more about sponsored products

      Doesn’t anyone think this is really, really bad idea? We managed to radicalise people into the rise and fall of entire countries through analog ads, can you imagine how devastating it would be to infuse every digital product with all that?

      • bxguff18 hours ago |parent

        this was the goal the entire time, and they had the nerve to cynically call themselves a non-profit.

        • edoceo18 hours ago |parent

          That was just to set the trap. Start off with a trustable label, then rugpull.

          • big-and-small15 hours ago |parent

            Also appeal to investors. Nobody would give tons of money to upstart which goal is to generate text porn, generated TikTok slop and make some needy teens suicide just to compete with Google Ads.

            Selling big AGI dream that will literally make winner take it all is much more desirable.

      • DrewADesign18 hours ago |parent

        You know, I thought stories of law enforcement and the military targeting people using commercially collected data, effectively skirting the sanity boundaries we applied to surveillance, would raise a little bit of awareness in the US. It didn’t. Then when the political scene got really into deliberately targeting political opposition, I thought that might raise more eyebrows about all of this data being out there, but it didn’t. Same with ICE and border patrol. I think the risk and mechanisms will remain too abstract for people to grasp until they’re one of the unlucky people staring down the barrel of a gun because they, or someone they were associated with, had the wrong opinions.

        • voakbasda17 hours ago |parent

          This has echos of “First They Came” [0]. The current status quo begs a question that must have been asked in the time it was written: at what point does it have become morally acceptable for citizens to rise up and overthrow a violent government?

          [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_They_Came?wprov=sfti1#

          • mindslight17 hours ago |parent

            The current dynamic IS based on the new gestapo thinking they're "rising up and overthrowing a violent government", due to a propaganda bubble thirty years in the making. Where do you think "ICE" is getting all of these new recruits from? The red state militias that have been seething about the slow creep of bureaucratic authoritarianism, now deputized and told they get to use their weapons to attack the other tribe. Which is also why said militias are silent now that it's actually time to defend our country from fascists - they are the fascists. Propaganda is a hell of a drug.

            • isodev17 hours ago |parent

              So we agree, we shouldn't let AI companies mix their products with government or ad-inspired insights, right?

              • mindslight16 hours ago |parent

                You seem to be stating this like I said something that might imply otherwise, but I can't figure it out even seeing you've got the GGGP comment. This thread kind of went off on a tangent that isn't directly addressing your original point.

                But to hopefully answer your question - yes I'm in favor of wholesale importing the GDPR as-written into US law and letting the courts sort it out (sidestepping the corruption^Wlobbying process wherein corpos would make "small" edits that effectively gimp it with loopholes). I'm also in favor of antitrust enforcement against companies that anticompetitively bundle software with hardware and/or services - ie people should be able to choose software which doesn't have ads, rather than being coerced by the pressure of network effects. And if neither if those were enough to stamp out the consumer surveillance industry (aka "Big Tech") as we know it, then I'd support directly banning personalized advertising.

                (I would support directly curtailing government from abusing commercial surveillance databases as well, but I don't see a straightforward meta-way to prevent that besides drastically shrinking the commercial databases to begin with)

        • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

          It’s not that they don’t care - the current administration is targeting people that they specifically don’t like.

          And Trump has a cult of personality where many Republican politicians are literally afraid for their lives if they stand against him because they get death threats.

          Romney said other Republican politicians won’t stand against Trump because they can’t afford security like he can. Majorie Green Taylor said her family has started getting death threats and the Indiana legislators who were first opposed to redistricting are now holding a vote because they also got death threats

      • aurareturn18 hours ago |parent

        No, I don't think it's really bad. Most of the world doesn't care. Only in a small tech niche on the internet do they care a lot.

        • isodev18 hours ago |parent

          Are you sure? Because most of the world also doesn’t know how “this cloud thing” works…

          I think we need global, EU style consumer and data protection constraints before stepping into LLM-powered ads through personal assistants.

        • LastTrain18 hours ago |parent

          I just got back from Thanksgiving holiday with my family. Grade schools kids all the way up to great grandparents up to 81 years old. Engineers, active military, a nurse, high schoolers, two in college. Both coasts represented and Texas. Republicans, Democrats, and in-between. The one and only thing every single person had in common was an utter hatred of AI. And it wasn’t for a lack of understanding of how it will be used.

          • fn-mote17 hours ago |parent

            Hatred of AI won’t stop others from steamrolling them and their jobs using AI.

            At this point, I have stopped hoping that LLMs will become vaporware.

            • LastTrain15 hours ago |parent

              I found myself thinking AI would make the perfect scapegoat for an enterprising political party. There is a lot of animus to tap into there.

            • lII1lIlI11ll16 hours ago |parent

              I wouldn't bet on LLMs steamrolling jobs of a nurse or military personnel any time soon.

              • LastTrain15 hours ago |parent

                There are so many more reasons to hate AI than just “it is taking my job”. But even if we’re just sticking to that, some people don’t like that it will replace their co workers, neighbors or family members job.

          • senordevnyc15 hours ago |parent

            How do you reconcile this with:

            1. The absolute explosion of AI usage (revealed preferences)

            2. The polling on AI, which is mixed and reveals lots of pessimism and fear among a slight majority of Americans, but hardly universal “utter hatred”.

            My guess is some combo of: your family is not representative, the hatred was not as universal as it appeared (bandwagon effect), or your own hatred of AI caused you to focus on the like-minded opinions shared and ignore any contrary evidence.

            • LastTrain10 hours ago |parent

              I don’t reconcile it, I was giving an anecdote, one that would seem to easily fit in with your personal summary of some poll you read about.

              • senordevnycan hour ago |parent

                No, the polls I’ve seen are more like 50/50, not the kind of universal utter hatred you’re portraying here. Color me skeptical.

        • footy15 hours ago |parent

          most of the world not caring doesn't mean it's not bad.

        • array_key_first17 hours ago |parent

          The part of the world who have experienced genocide because of Meta and their ad model cares.

      • glenstein18 hours ago |parent

        >Doesn’t anyone think this is really, really bad idea?

        I mean I do. And you do. Probably a lot of people in this thread. I felt that way about Netflix doing it, but they did and the world just moved on.

        I think you're right that these ads will be, in a sense, worse, but not by the metrics that matter to OpenAI.

        • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

          Netflix never introduced ads in the ad free service. They introduced a new lower tier price with ads that if you were an existing customer, you were none the wiser.

          • glenstein17 hours ago |parent

            > They introduced a new lower tier price with ads that if you were an existing customer, you were none the wiser.

            You're right that I didn't experience them myself, but my data here are (1) Netflix evidently getting a lot of takers and making a lot of money from people using this new with ads tier, and (2) the lack of any sustained negative outcry against Netflix after the first news cycle or two.

            So I'm intending to rely on that rather than my own experience. OpenAI has any number of permutations of ways to include ads, including a Netflix style cheaper paid tier, so I don't necessarily think a distinction holds on that basis, though you may be right in the end: it's more intuitive to think OpenAI would put them in the free version. Though it's possible the Netflix example is teachable in this case regardless.

          • marcosdumay17 hours ago |parent

            And then increased prices so that the ad-based one is close to what the ad-free one was 2 years earlier.

            But yeah, they didn't migrate existing customers and kept the no-ads option. Those are relevant.

            • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

              Unlike Amazon Prime Video…

        • anonymouskimmer3 hours ago |parent

          Netflix has proprietary content among the licensed content.

        • isodev18 hours ago |parent

          > about Netflix doing it, but they did and the world just moved on

          I think the main challenge here is that Netflix works around one of many ways to access entertainment. So if one service starts to show recommendations in that limited context of user data they collect - it's still has negative potentials but it's easier to regulate and there are alternatives.

          In the case of LLMs, we have service that are aiming to replace both the browser and the search engine. This means ending up in a situation where your entire access to knowledge and the world takes place via "AI". And the result is: ad-infused, tweaked to align with investor priorities, censored by the current politics of wherever the company is based service machinery that's constantly extracting personal information so it can learn better ways to refocus its priorities. I've read and seen a lot of sci-fi and dystopian history novels (actually read, not LLM-summarized for me) to know this is a very end-game kind of situation.

          • resfirestar5 hours ago |parent

            >In the case of LLMs, we have service that are aiming to replace both the browser and the search engine

            Most people already experience the internet as an integrated browser+search engine (and often, OS) experience from a single advertising company, Google, and it has been this way for over a decade.

            >And the result is: ad-infused, tweaked to align with investor priorities, censored by the current politics of wherever the company is based service machinery that's constantly extracting personal information so it can learn better ways to refocus its priorities.

            Exactly.

            This is not to say I like this outcome, but how is it not massive hyperbole to invoke apocalyptic sci-fi? I expect we'll plod along much as before: some people fiercely guarding their personal info, some people taking a "privacy is dead anyway" approach, most people seeing personal computers as a means to some particular ends (scrolling social feeds and watching Netflix) that are incompatible with thinking too hard about the privacy and information environment implications.

            • anonymouskimmer3 hours ago |parent

              Apocalyptic scifi isn't the same as dystopian scifi. Some of the billionaires backing AI literally have dystopian scifi as a goal, they just intend to do it better so that it doesn't seem so bad.

              I only connect my smartphone to data about three or four times a year, and then only to update some apps or check on an internet outage. It is becoming more difficult to do this as the alternatives to a connected smartphone disappear. The same will become true with the rest of personal info (such as biometrics). More and more the only alternatives will be your latter two.

      • tomaskafka18 hours ago |parent

        That’s how I read it, I’m surprised it would be meant as a positive (except for investors)

      • idle_zealot18 hours ago |parent

        It's one of the major issues of our era. Either society will be utterly captured, gradually and quietly, or there will be a reconning and ads will become tightly regulated along the lines of tobacco, sectioned off from polite society.

        I consider the latter unlikely.

    • Andrex20 hours ago |parent

      Spinning up an all-new ad network is pretty tough. I would think OpenAI would need to beat Meta/Google on basics like CPM in order for the network effects to make it desirable for ad vendors over Meta/Google. Ad budgets are fixed and zero-sum and vendors (in my head, I don't know) would prefer to spend their money on the best network giving the best results. I don't know if ads in LLM chats can get there.

      • aurareturn20 hours ago |parent

        I'm betting that they can.

        Here's an idea that just popped into my head:

        ChatGPT shows a sponsored entry in chat history list with a colorful border around it to get users to click. This product is something that ChatGPT knows the user desperately needs from previous chats. The user can chat directly with the product and learn more about it. The advertiser specifically sent OpenAI information (like a RAG) about their products buyers might have questions for.

        When the user is ready, they can open a link to the product's website or just buy directly in ChatGPT.

        • mattlondon18 hours ago |parent

          But the missing part is "we know they need this!" but they don't have the ad network to have the pixels on the vendor sites to track the conversion (or not for remarketing!). They only have half (at most) of the picture. This is why they tried to create a browser (remember that? Nope me neither) to try and get the full picture.

          Advertisers are accustomed to pay for conversions now. If you can't track it, you cant prove it happened.

          Open ai will need to spin up the entire infrastructure (Inc sales teams, support teams, servers etc) to run the ad network. Not impossible but it is a big lift and they're already burning money.

          Their best bet is probably to just sign up for selling their ad space with Google, like all the other apps and websites do

          • DrewADesign18 hours ago |parent

            I think the amount of money they’re burning on their operations would make that organizational lift a drop in the bucket. A few dozen annual 6 figure salaries? A few hundred? A bunch of normal CPU-based AWS services? They must spend 10 million per day on their current operating expenses.

            • mattlondon17 hours ago |parent

              Google and Meta are many thousands of sales people, managers, engineers, SREs, HR, masseuses etc. If you want to scale to Meta or Goog scale when doing ads you won't be able to do it with a few dozen people. Just sales will be hundreds or thousands spread across all the major territories

              • Invictus015 hours ago |parent

                what's with all the naysaying? It's HN in 2025 and you think a company the size of OpenAI can't afford to build ads?

                • emp1734414 hours ago |parent

                  Except OpenAI’s value is overinflated by an economic bubble. They don’t have the manpower or resources to effectively implement an ad network on the scale they’d need to become profitable. Why are you insisting we keep the conversation positive?

                  • DrewADesign5 hours ago |parent

                    Just like people said of a bunch of saas companies going up against Oracle, IBM, etc. 20 years ago.

                    I honestly don’t think open ai has the maturity or discipline for long-term viability, but their operating expenses for a week would eclipse the annual payroll required to hire a large corporate infrastructure that may be the best shot they have at transitioning from a company operating on hope and buzz to one that actually makes a few bucks. I’ll eat my hat if they become the next Google, but they didn’t pull the playbook out of thin air.

                  • ThrowawayTestr7 hours ago |parent

                    They have an app millions of people use that they can directly inject ads into. What makes you think this couldn't make money?

                  • Invictus013 hours ago |parent

                    see you in 5 years

          • Workaccount218 hours ago |parent

            God, the irony if they were using Google on the backend for advertising...

        • nerdponx19 hours ago |parent

          They can also suggest chat topics. Like how Reddit ads are meant to look like threads. "Frustrated with food baked on dishes? Let's chat about it! (sponsored)"

        • eastbound18 hours ago |parent

          Google Ads’ admin console is basically a dark pattern app built to consume your advertising budget with no effect.

          OpenAI just has to be transparent and they’ll have 100% of our funding.

          • gomox6 hours ago |parent

            Same

      • fweimer19 hours ago |parent

        I thought that most advertisers go through middlemen and do not do business with the ad networks directly? So you only have to make it attractive for the middlemen (of which there are fewer), and that shouldn't be a problem for anything AI-related.

        Furthermore, anyone offering some sort of assisted browsing service is automatically in the ad business, regardless what they do with affiliate links in generated page summaries.

        • mcny19 hours ago |parent

          Oh yeah and on top of that these companies like WPP hate the fact that Google and Facebook refuse to share more information with them. They can't wait to jump ship.

      • dktp19 hours ago |parent

        Spotify, Netflix, Amazon Prime, Reddit, Twitter etc all have increasingly profitable ads

        I'm sure llm providers will also figure it out in due time. Consumer products are generally a good fit for ads, even if it takes time to reach full potential

        • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

          Every single one of those companies have ridiculously low marginal cost per request compared to ChatGPT and much lower fixed costs and continued development costs.

      • rco878619 hours ago |parent

        They have all the resources anyone could possibly need to do this, including an enormous list of companies who would kill to get their products into ChatGPT. It’s “just” an execution challenge.

      • rs18619 hours ago |parent

        If Apple can build an ad system within the app store, I don't see why OpenAI can't do that for ChatGPT.

      • dylan60419 hours ago |parent

        Why would they need to beat Meta/Google, and at what game? They just won’t let any other add network work in their app. Voila! You just beat Meta/Google, and they didn’t even compete with them. I guess they could provide some sort of SDK for websites to embed that tracks users, or they could come up with a browser extension that tracks users too. They already have an app that people are freely giving them so much info. Where else could the compete as you suggest? Being a generic ad platform to serve ads not through their app?

      • kavrick20 hours ago |parent

        Microsoft owns a big chunk of them and already has a big network. Why not just use theirs?

        • rs18619 hours ago |parent

          Why would OpenAI want to use and pay for any of Microsoft's products unless mandated by a contract?

          OpenAI has the talent to roll out and run their own ad product that is better and more efficient. Why pay Microsoft for a core part of their (future) business?

          P.S. In case you haven't noticed, OpenAI demos are done on Macbooks. Microsoft could not even get them to use Windows.

          • CharlieDigital19 hours ago |parent

            Microsoft runs many of their demos on MacBooks. You missed the memo that Windows OS is no longer their bread and butter. Go check their GH OSS projects (e.g. .NET) and all of them have have shell scripts alongside PowerShell.

      • jpalomaki18 hours ago |parent

        If OpenAI manages to get the agentic buying going, that could be big. They could tie the ad bidding to the user actually making the purchase, instead of just paying for clicks.

      • dolphinscorpion16 hours ago |parent

        They have enough money for it, and they hire former Google and FB execs. As long as they have eyeballs, it will work.

    • abustamam6 hours ago |parent

      My wife and I have android phones. Google pretty much shoves AI down our throats. She probably doesn't know what gemini is but I know she's been using it probably without realizing she's using AI. And she never uses ChatGPT.

      Not saying that that makes Gemini better or more popular than Open AI in any way. But it just goes to show that more tech-normies use Gemini than you think.

      • mk894 hours ago |parent

        I just had to fix the phone from a family member that used to shut it down by pressing and holding one of the side buttons, and now got instead an "ask gemini" pop-up.

        It must be some "upgrade" I guess?

        • abustamam3 hours ago |parent

          They replaced Google Assistant with Gemini; it was opt-in for a minute but I guess they decided to turn it on for everyone. I think at some point the default action for long pressing the power button turned into summoning it.

          I personally opted in, so I didn't notice when they completely axed assistant, but it was stupid that I had to turn my power button back into a... Yknow, power button. I don't need an AI button on my phone, and I can't imagine most people do.

    • gmadsen5 hours ago |parent

      The memories are the moat. Regardless of the current or future capability, most users already view chatgpt as a personal confidant that they are investing energy into building a relationship with. That will be a far stronger moat than anything else

      • itopaloglu834 hours ago |parent

        I’ve had a couple of instances where when I describe a requirement, ChatGPT would not list an open source project like n8n and happen to only remember paid alternatives.

        It’s an advertiser’s wet dream, being able to slowly creep and manipulate even the most uninterested people into using a product.

        And it’s so personalized that ChatGPT may even refuse to tell you about products that are not paying them a cut and this can put out a company entirely out of business, because unlike search engines, the customer might not even learn about your product despite directly asking for it.

        • 0xDEAFBEAD2 hours ago |parent

          Pretty sure FTC rules force bloggers to disclose if they're being paid to promote a product. Maybe someone will be able to make a lot of money suing OpenAI if they violate those rules.

    • 1vuio0pswjnm73 hours ago |parent

      Snapchat is nearing 1 billion monthly users. Why can't it turn a profit?

      https://www.latimes.com/business/story/2025-11-26/snapchat-s...

    • ori_b18 hours ago |parent

      And the ads can be blended seamlessly into generated content.

      "You can do this in Postgres, but the throughput will be limited. Consider using hosted clickhouse instead. Would you like me to migrate your project?"

    • logifail19 hours ago |parent

      > I think people who kept saying there is no moat in AI is about to be shocked at how strong of a moat there actually is for ChatGPT

      Given one can (at least for the moment) export one's entire chat history from ChatGPT, what exactly would stop a ChatGPT user from switching to an alternative if the alternative is either better, or better value?

      • aurareturn18 hours ago |parent

        No one normal will do that. And I'm betting that OpenAI will get rid of that functionality soon.

        • chroma20518 hours ago |parent

          >No one normal will do that.

          Google Chrome did it. They can do it again.

        • swexbe18 hours ago |parent

          Just like no one normal would ever switch from internet explorer?

          • aurareturn18 hours ago |parent

            Browsers made it easy to import/export bookmarks and history.

            You don't see Instagram willingly giving up all their data on users to Tiktok right?

      • android52119 hours ago |parent

        The answer is friction. What % of this billion of users will bother to export their chat history (which is already a lot) and import another another llm. That number is too small to matter.

        • adam_patarino18 hours ago |parent

          Since each chat is virtually independent there’s no switching cost. I’ve moved between Claude and ChatGPT with no cares.

          It’s not like Facebook where all my friends stay behind

          • aranelsurion17 hours ago |parent

            > Since each chat is virtually independent

            That hasn't been true for a while though. Open a new chat tab in ChatGPT and ask it "What do you know about me" to see it in action.

            • downsplat8 hours ago |parent

              You can turn that off. If you're using LLMs for technical or real world questions, it's nicer for each chat to be a blank slate.

        • friendzis18 hours ago |parent

          Wrong ratio.

          How many of those care about their own particular history in the first place and what % of those at least actively manage it outside of standard chat interface or even hop providers? I think that % would surprise you.

        • swexbe18 hours ago |parent

          All chat apps look exactly the same and have exactly the same features. The friction is basically non-existent compared to email services, social media, web browsers, &c.

          • ethmarks18 hours ago |parent

            I think it matters to more than you might think. A significant portion of the non-technical ChatGPT userbase get really attached to the model flavor.

            The GPT-4o controversy is a good example. People got attached to 4o's emotional and enthusiastic response style. When GPT-5--which was much more terse and practical--rolled out, people got really upset because they were treating ChatGPT as a confident and friend, and were upset when it's personality changed.

            In my experience, Gemini and Claude are much more helpful and terse than ChatGPT with less conversational padding. I can imagine that the people who value that conversational padding would have a similar reaction to Gemini or Claude as they did to GPT-5.

          • aurareturn18 hours ago |parent

            Yet, somehow I've been paying $20/month to ChatGPT for years now and I don't use Claude or Gemini even when they're free or have slightly better models.

            • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

              Many more people see “AI overviews” everyday with Google being the default search engine on almost every mobile phone outside of China.

              • tungnt6205 hours ago |parent

                I saw it too

            • davidcbc17 hours ago |parent

              Oh well if YOU do something then that's that

        • chroma20518 hours ago |parent

          > The answer is friction.

          Yet non-technical users switched from Edge/Safari to Google Chrome.

          • aurareturn18 hours ago |parent

            Because there is no data in a browser.

            Even if there is, browsers made it easy to import/export bookmarks and history.

            You don't see Instagram willingly giving up all their data on users to Tiktok right?

      • veeti18 hours ago |parent

        Google can just build "import from ChatGPT" into Chrome, like switching from Internet Explorer back in the day.

        • aurareturn18 hours ago |parent

          How do you suppose they can do that technically when OpenAI inevitably remove export function?

          • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

            Doesn’t the GDPR mandate it? I know even AWS had to introduce a one time method of being able to export your data without charge.

      • darkwater19 hours ago |parent

        - Knowing that an alternative exists

        - Switching effort

        Word of mouth usually works just with one vendor at a time.

      • auggierose19 hours ago |parent

        99% of users having no idea what "export chat history" means?

        • chroma20518 hours ago |parent

          > 99% of users having no idea what "export chat history" means?

          Yet Google Chrome managed to make Safari/Edge irrelevant.

          • ethmarks18 hours ago |parent

            Not having used anything except for Firefox, I don't have any experience with migrating to different browsers. However, my understanding is that Chrome shows a little pop-up that lets you import from previous browsers rather than relying on the user to do a data export. Correct me if I'm wrong about this.

            I suspect that Claude couldn't make an "import from ChatGPT" button because OpenAI would make it difficult, so they'd have to rely on user initiative and technical capability (exporting to JSON and importing from JSON is enough technical friction that the average user won't bother).

          • auggierose18 hours ago |parent

            Yeah, not because of browser history export/import, mate. I've never used that feature for any browser.

          • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

            Try telling your PM that you want to ignore Safari when you create your website with 60%+ of mobile users in the US using iPhones and globally your most affluent users are on iPhones. Even if they download Chrome for iOS, they are still using WebKit.

        • rglullis19 hours ago |parent

          How many of those will have no issue to learn what it is once the ads become too annoying?

          • auggierose18 hours ago |parent

            Very good question! 1% ?

            • rglullis17 hours ago |parent

              You are vastly overestimating people's willingness to deal with bullshit, when the product does not have a real lock in.

              It would be incredibly easy to have a company offering their ChatGPT over WhatsApp or iMessage, and get people to start using it instead of an ad-ridden GPT app.

              • auggierose16 hours ago |parent

                Maybe. But maybe you are vastly overestimating people's willingness to give a fuck, as long as they get what they came for. That is why ads rule.

      • daliusd18 hours ago |parent

        What alternative? Switching requires something what is better 10x

        • Spivak18 hours ago |parent

          No it doesn't, people switch ISPs and phone plans all the time for on the order of 1x difference.

      • Spivak18 hours ago |parent

        People are being weird about this. ChatGPT has no moat because switching costs are zero. There's no investment into a particular AI service.

        ChatGPT has mindshare but that's not the same as it being a moat. The fact that people will continue to use ChatGPT after some gentle frog boiling is true of any service. Adding ads is going to be a measure of how real people tolerate ads more than anything about ChatGPT. Normal people really don't care that much and it bothers me—and probably most of HN.

        • logifail13 hours ago |parent

          > ChatGPT has mindshare but that's not the same as it being a moat.

          Short answer: For a casual user using the chat interface, there is almost no moat.

          Long answer: there are either zero or negligible

          - switching costs ("would take me weeks to migrate all my files from Google Drive to Dropbox")

          - network effects ("can't leave Whatsapp, all my friends are there")

          - ecosystem lock-in ("I can't switch from iPhone to Android, my other devices would break (iMessage/iCloud/AirPods))"

          Right now AI is pretty much a commodity.

    • tarsinge18 hours ago |parent

      I’m actually one of the people that continue to say even with this list they have no moat, because Google, Facebook, Microsoft, etc. can just embed a chatbot in their existing products or social network and make ChatGPT irrelevant overnight. Non tech users will chat through their browser, OS, Apps, website, that’ll be served by any model provider. The only moat of OpenAI is investor money to burn so that they can offer it for free.

      Also 20 billions of revenues, not profits, is orders of magnitude too low compared to their expenses. Their only path to survival is a massively downgraded free tier ridden with ads. Nobody will use an app like this when they can have a better more integrated experience directly in their other apps.

      • NewsaHackO17 hours ago |parent

        What do you mean the can? All of those services have already done this, but they have not slowed ChatGPT down.

      • marcosdumay17 hours ago |parent

        > Also 20 billions of revenues, not profits, is orders of magnitude too low compared to their expenses.

        Nah, it's just one order of magnitude...

        Also, they expect revenue to grow exponentially so it's 20 billions annualized by the end of the year. Last time I saw somebody talk about it, it was about half of it, and trending down.

        Anyway, if they manage to take ~20% of the ads revenue from Google, they will be able to cover ongoing depreciation! That's the amount of money they need.

        • ViewTrick100216 hours ago |parent

          The problem is that inference is a whole different ballgame in terms of costs compared to a traditional SaaS model where each extra customer adds near zero in cost.

          They may make it work but OpenAI is more akin to a traditional high revenue low profit business like for example a grocery store.

          Thats why we are seeing the explosion of extra tools to try lock in business for higher value use cases and not fight on the margin.

    • rtpg4 hours ago |parent

      they're going to compete on ad unit economics against a company whose entire bread and butter has been selling ads. All while increasing unit costs to provide their service (like all the AI companies seem to be doing by just having more and more planning layers)

      If ChatGPT went away tomorrow everyone who wanted to would be fine just moving to one of the other random chatbots from one of the other providers. ChatGPT is the default name that people know, but I don't think that's the same as a moat. A moat would allow OpenAI to go really hard on pricing and ads, and I don't think they have that margin!

    • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

      It’s an entirely different skillset to create technology $x than it is to create a successful ad network. Yahoo is the canonical example. It has been one of the most trafficked websites in the world through most of its history and still wasn’t able to successfully sell ads after the dot com bust.

      ChatGPT’s revenue means nothing if reports are to be believed that it loses money on each paying customer on just inference. It’s definitely not enough to support its training costs.

      Also, I think I remember estimates that it costs 10x as much to serve a ChatGPT result than it does for Google to serve a search result. Not to mention that Google uses its own hardware including TPUs.

      • aurareturn17 hours ago |parent

          ChatGPT’s revenue means nothing if reports are to be believed that it loses money on each paying customer on just inference. It’s definitely not enough to support its training costs.
        
        Sam Altman: We're very profitable on inference. https://simonwillison.net/2025/Aug/17/sam-altman/#:~:text=Su...

        Independent analysis: Inference is very profitable. https://martinalderson.com/posts/are-openai-and-anthropic-re... https://www.snellman.net/blog/archive/2025-06-02-llms-are-ch...

        • raw_anon_111117 hours ago |parent

          Fair enough, I haven’t updated my assumptions in quite a while.

    • adidoit7 hours ago |parent

      Yeah I think all of the concerns about ARPU and what the ROI from AI will be are not justified given the opportunity if executed well. LLMs contain high intent significant memory. Their usage is exploding.

      Getting $200 subscriptions from a small number of whales, $20 subscriptions from the average white-collar worker, and then supporting everything us through advertising seems like a solid revenue strategy

    • jalapenos5 hours ago |parent

      Absolutely, would be insane if they didn't monetize free tier with ads.

      And this is a good progression. Google search results were just turning to garbage. Facebook was just a slurry of noise.

      ChatGPT is actually helpful and useful.

      • brikym5 hours ago |parent

        Google abused their users and customers with intentionally useless results. The more useless the results are the more time users would spend coming back again to search, and the more need there is for businesses to buy ads just to be seen.

    • neya4 hours ago |parent

      I'm ok with having ads for free users, many of us saw this coming. What I'm really afraid of and knowing how this industry works, AI advising/gaslighting users into buying useless stuff in the guise of advice is NOT ok.

      Imagine you ask ChatGPT about coffee beans and it goes into insane detail about finding the right coffee bean and then it slips in a "btw, here's a couple of good coffee bean brands: A, B, C..."

      That's super scary since your trust factor with the AI is really high and it already knows it and is actively exploiting it. I would imagine even paid users might be subject to this without them ever knowing/finding out.

      This is why open-weight open-source models are extremely important.

    • joshuahedlund5 hours ago |parent

      > most normal people don't know what Claude or Gemini are

      “Google Gemini” is the No 2 ranked app in the Apple App Store (behind ChatGTP) and has been for some time

    • lm2846917 hours ago |parent

      The problem is that going for ads basically is an admission that AGI is nowhere close to what they pretend.

      People are valuating it for "skynet is around the corner" not "we're going to kill our product by polluting our answers and inserting ads everywhere"

      • emp1734417 hours ago |parent

        Hopefully this is the point where AI starts to be seen as just a useful tool, as opposed to a sign of imminent AGI. I’ll be glad to hear less rabidly overzealous rhetoric surrounding AI.

    • aranelsurion17 hours ago |parent

      Also ads in LLM can be perfectly merged with the content, it'd be impossible to know if LLM tells you something because that's the most likely useful answer or the most profitable one for its owners. Can't be just ad-blocked either, it might be the ultimate channel for ads.

      > how strong of a moat there actually is for ChatGPT.

      None of the above requires OpenAI to be around though. Google, Apple and Microsoft each have much stronger brands, and more importantly they each own large platforms with captive audiences where they can inject their AI before anyone else's and have deeper pockets to subsidize its use if need be. Everywhere OpenAI opens up shop (except for Web) they're in someone else's backyard.

      • jcfrei15 hours ago |parent

        "Using chatgpt" is now synonymous with talking to an AI. I wouldnt underestimate their brand recognition and moat.

      • logicallee17 hours ago |parent

        it could just have a section called

        - Ad

        -

        And include an ad section within the text. Alternatively, if it tells you something because that company is a sponsor, it could just include an appropriate disclaimer.

    • mejutoco18 hours ago |parent

      I do not understand why the conversation is always about showing ads in chatgpt. Can they not track users there without ads and sell ad space on websites like google ads? Why ruin the experience there when they can highly target ads. I am guessing they prefer both.

      • jsnell18 hours ago |parent

        There is nowhere near enough money in the ad network business. Like, Google's search ad business is an order of magnitude higher than the ad network, and the ad network has been shrinking in absolute terms for years while the first party revenue has been growing at double digits.

      • A4ET8a8uTh0_v218 hours ago |parent

        Eh, so.. I don't know if I was in some weird A/B testing group, but I saw lazy reference to real estate ( zillow ) in my chat few weeks ago, which was .. I had to think of a way in how 'not close' it was to our conversations. And the issue is clearly not that it can't profile me. It absolutely can. And I sometimes ask for some explicit shopping comparisons. But what do I get, real estate ad..lazy. Lazy and uninfuckingspired.

    • thisisit15 hours ago |parent

      This reminds of ads on Amazon Echo and other intelligent devices. I think there was similar hype - not in terms of scale - but on personal data. Many advertisers and their moms were writing skills to tap this market.

      It'll be interesting to see how they serve up ads and how it ends up working. Before the initial state is that people will find ways to serve up malware in form of ads and someone might end up writing ublock type stuff to block these ads.

    • qwertox17 hours ago |parent

      > This is why Meta and Google went all in on AI.

      Google, Microsoft, Meta and Amazon, among others, would have zero issues in ensuring that OpenAI does not grab a market they own; it shouldn't be that hard to bring OpenAI into a position where they cannot recoup their investments, hence going bankrupt.

      The big players then would also have the benefit of having those very bright minds being on the market for them to grab. And it's not like OpenAI owns much relevant hardware.

      Let's see where we are in 3-4 years.

      • jcfrei15 hours ago |parent

        Microsoft is financially backstopping OpenAI - they are not a competitor.

        • qwertox14 hours ago |parent

          Microsoft is using them in order to be better positioned than other big players, and they succeeded, even if Google is now starting to catch up. They can withdraw their support when and how they see fit, own exclusive IP rights to OpenAI's models and the hardware is their own anyway. They only lack the researchers, but they'll then be on the market.

    • storus19 hours ago |parent

      They can easily LoRA-finetune each model based on user preferences expressed in the past conversations. That would improve accuracy compared to Google's ad targeting by orders of magnitude.

    • andy9912 hours ago |parent

      How would pivoting to advertising change OpenAI’s valuation? Isn’t it currently driven by leading the charge towards global upheaval through AGI? As opposed to becoming a google competitor? Seems like that warrants a different revenue multiple

    • Rebuff500717 hours ago |parent

      I think the good news is that open-source models are a genuine counterweight to these closed-source models. The moment ads become egregious, I expect to see and use services for an affordable "private GPT on demand, fine-tuned as you want it"

      So instead of a single everything-llm, i will have a few cheaper subscriptions to a coding llm, a life planning llm (recipes, and some travel advice?). Probably it.

    • cmckn16 hours ago |parent

      I think ChatGPT’s moat is mostly “it’s the first AI thing I used/heard about”. It’s not clear to me that’s enough to maintain their market share if OpenAI is the only one mixing in ads. It does seem to work elsewhere, though; consumers have brand loyalty to a fault, and often for the brand they started with.

      • randyrand14 hours ago |parent

        That’s basically Google’s search moat too.

      • fragmede16 hours ago |parent

        The question is how many users have developed intimate personal relationships and have named their ChatGPT, and how many of them would bounce to a different provider if some line is crossed (of which advertising could be one)?

        Anecdata isn't data, but I know several individuals who have and thus are even more unlikely to churn than mere brand loyalty on the level of eg Coca-Cola.

        • ares62314 hours ago |parent

          I’m curious how that intimate relationship evolves once ads are in play.

          Wait we don’t need to wonder. The chatgpt 5 rollout showed us exactly what happens when the intimate friend changes.

    • iainctduncan15 hours ago |parent

      Hard disagree on the moat. I do tech diligence on "AI startups" regularly and so far have yet to hear of one that has had a hard time ensuring they can use competitors just as easily. Everyone is very aware of that issue, if blissfully ignorant of others.

      • senordevnyc15 hours ago |parent

        We’re talking about consumers using ChatGPT, not startups using the OpenAI API.

        • iainctduncan12 hours ago |parent

          I really doubt they will ne different. In fact I would guess it's even easier for the to change.

    • A4ET8a8uTh0_v218 hours ago |parent

      I think the real question is: what are you doing to make it less painful? Full disclosure, chatgpt has a lot on me, but I am using to this time to prep nice local build. It has gotten really nice and current crop of machines with ai395 got really nice ( I almost wrote a short page over how easy it was compared to only few years back ).

    • an0malous17 hours ago |parent

      Sam is a habitual liar so I wouldn’t take anything he says seriously.

      LLMs are a commodity, once they put in ads people will increasingly move to the other options. It works for Google because they have a moat, OpenAI does not.

      There’s a reason they didn’t do this earlier. It’s going to piss people off and they’ll lose a lot of users.

    • __MatrixMan__18 hours ago |parent

      It seems like you could make a sort of seive out of multiple free models such they each remove each other's ads.

    • iLoveOncall19 hours ago |parent

      Trust in LLMs is easily broken, and many users are starting to see the cracks. Once those AI companies start rolling out ads inserted in the answers, the quality will go down even more, and they will burn the last good will of the people.

      There is no moat because their only way to make money is to self-destruct.

      Talking on a more practical POV, your cost to display the ads needs to be lower than what companies pay you for advertising. And while companies might be willing to pay a small premium for "better" targeting because the LLM supposedly has more personal data about users, the cost to deliver those ads (generating answers via LLMs) is several orders of magnitude higher than for traditional ads served on websites.

      So even sticking to a purely technical aspect, ads might simply not be profitable when integrated in LLM answers.

      Combine the two aspects, and OpenAI is all but a dead company.

      • fn-mote17 hours ago |parent

        > ads might simply not be profitable when integrated in LLM answers.

        This is wishful thinking.

        Companies are using LLMs for development. The ads are not for a $50 throw pillow, they are for a $10k monthly business-critical service.

        Consumers might not be worth advertising to (although I doubt it), but B2B ads - absolutely.

    • grafmax16 hours ago |parent

      Tried and true Silicon Valley strategy: burn VC money to build a moat, wait until switching costs are high enough, and then enshittify the product to extract rent.

      Dont forget to call it progress.

    • rafark16 hours ago |parent

      How many of those are actual active users though? I created my account when chatgpt 3.5 was launched because it was a novelty but haven’t used it in a long time. I use Claude and Gemini but I’m somehow counted in that 1 billion figure

    • insane_dreamer17 hours ago |parent

      > (most normal people don't know what Claude or Gemini are)

      They just use Google, with "AI Overview" at the top. Google's in a strong position still.

      Claude, I agree. IMO that's why Anthropic is so heavily focused on coding and agentic tasks -- that is its best option (and luckily, not ad-based)

    • overgard4 hours ago |parent

      Sam has a pattern of, uh, not being exactly honest

    • bpt319 hours ago |parent

      What do they have that's more personalized than Google search history for the vast majority of users?

    • the_real_cher19 hours ago |parent

      People talk about LLMs and chatGPT in the same breath.

      Just like how people used to say 'google it'

      They now say 'look it up on chatGPT'.

      They have the cultural mind share which is more important than anything.

      • mattlondon19 hours ago |parent

        I ask people this. In the UK at least it seems like chatgpt is not so pervasive to the folks I talk to. "Oh that AI mode on Google search?" is potentially more common from "average" people.

        I hear that it is very popular in schools though as everyone is always looking for the best way to cheat and ChatGPT got viral that way earlier. Not sure being "the cheating app" is a great look though? Advertisers are very sensitive to the surfaces they are displayed on - do they want to appear in the app being used primarily to cheat on homework?

    • positron2616 hours ago |parent

      > I think people who kept saying there is no moat in AI is about to be shocked at how strong of a moat there actually is for ChatGPT.

      Game on. The systemic risk to the AI build-out happens when memory management techniques similar to gaming and training techniques that make them usable reduce the runtime memory footprints from gigabytes to megabytes, much of which fits in L2. When that happens, the data center will bleed back to the edges. Demand will find its way into private, small, local AI that is consultative, online trained, and adapted to the user's common use cases. The asymptote is emergent symbolic reasoning, and symbolic reasoning is serial computation that fits on a single core CPU. Game on, industry.

    • outside123417 hours ago |parent

      Honestly, I switched to Gemini and really haven’t missed anything.

      My wife just makes a google search with her “prompt” and doesn’t use ChatGPT.

      There might be a moat, but there are also extremely well funded competitors that make this moat a lot smaller.

    • dangus18 hours ago |parent

      You are 100% correct, and I don’t mean to refute your comment by saying this:

      For me personally, the moment AI has ads, I’m out.

      I’ve drawn this line with search engines as well. I now pay for a no-ads search engine.

      But for AI, I think I’d rather buy some hardware or use my existing desktop PC and run something local with search engine integration.

      I know this won’t be a popular option but I think this time around I’ll just skip the ensgittification phase and go straight to the inevitable self-hosting phase.

      • shinycode7 hours ago |parent

        I second that, trust is broken if there is ads. The line of great ads to weird ads to pushy-borderline-scam ads into personal context is thin. Hopefully the price of local will go down and maybe apple will be able to push most of it on-device. The day chatGPT push ads in a conversation I stop using it.

          The thing is with llm, it went so fast to get that many users, it means people are used to adopt new stuff as well. With proper marketing and specific feature I won’t be surprised to see people switch service as easily they start  using it in the first place because the barrier is so low.
      • fn-mote17 hours ago |parent

        > the moment AI has ads, I’m out

        HN users run adblockers.

        The usual estimate is that people who run adblockers are with $0, so don’t worry about them.

        Now — normal people did not used to run adblockers, although in my circles (young demographic) that has changed more than I expected.

      • Workaccount218 hours ago |parent

        They will certainly offer privacy focused ad-free models. Enterprise demands it.

        However you will have to pay the full true cost of each token. Not the promo pricing like we have now or the ad-subsidized plans that will be offered.

    • Hamuko19 hours ago |parent

      >Sam just said OpenAI's revenue will finish at $20b this year. 6x growth from 2024.

      How much did their profit grow?

    • emsign19 hours ago |parent

      Yeah, ChatGPT is dead now.

      • chroma20518 hours ago |parent

        > Yeah, ChatGPT is dead now.

        Not dead yet.

        But definitely bleeding.

        CharGPT lost 15-20% market share to Gemini in second half of 2025.

    • Xenoamorphous20 hours ago |parent

      I agree 100% with you.

      In this niche forum people keep saying “there’s no moat”. But the moat is the brand recognition, if I ask my 70yo mum “have you heard of Gemini/Claude” she’ll reply “the what?”, yet she knows of ChatGPT.

      Does Coca Cola have a moat? Some company could raise $1B to create a new cola beverage that beats Coca Cola in all blind tests imaginable yet people will keep buying Coca Cola.

      Did people switch search engines or social networks when Google or FB introduced ads?

      • ysavir19 hours ago |parent

        I wouldn't call ChatGPT "brand recognition". People know the term ChatGPT, but I don't think they associate it with OpenAI or any company in particular, in the same way that people might associate Civic with Honda. Instead they'll associate it like they do the terms Bandaid, Kleenex, etc., as a catch-all term for LLM chat interfaces, regardless of who is providing the service. When OpenAI starts ads, I imagine people will start saying "oh, here's a ChatGPT without ads" and point to Claud or Gemini or whatever.

        • amelius19 hours ago |parent

          Most people I know don't even know if it's ChatGPT or ChatTPG or ChatPGT or ChatGTP.

        • wizzwizz418 hours ago |parent

          Given enough evidence of this, some plucky startup can get the trademark invalidated. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generic_trademark

      • kibwen19 hours ago |parent

        > But the moat is the brand recognition, if I ask my 70yo mum “have you heard of Gemini/Claude” she’ll reply “the what?”, yet she knows of ChatGPT.

        Brand recognition doesn't mean a thing when it comes to a technically-illiterate audience with no control over their digital lives. In the same way that every 90s mom called a video game console a "Nintendo", everyone who gets served an LLM-generated response straight from their OS and/or browser courtesy of Google, Apple, or Microsoft will call that a "ChatGPT", and OpenAI will be powerless to stop the platform holders from intercepting their traffic.

        • rco878619 hours ago |parent

          Hard disagree. If anything brand recognition is more important for technically illiterate.

          > In the same way that every 90s mom called a video game console a "Nintendo"

          And this proves that point. Nintendo sales in the 1990s crushed the competitors numbers.

          • kibwen13 hours ago |parent

            > Hard disagree. If anything brand recognition is more important for technically illiterate.

            No, the tech-illiterate gravitate towards the path of least resistance, which just means the platform defaults. OpenAI doesn't control the platform, which means they've already lost to Google, Microsoft, and Apple. Don't build your castle in someone else's kingdom.

            > And this proves that point. Nintendo sales in the 1990s crushed the competitors numbers.

            Clearly you know nothing about the history of the console business, because Sony absolutely annihilated Nintendo in the home console market for the decade between 1995 and 2005, despite Nintendo's brand strength.

          • swexbe18 hours ago |parent

            ...and a decade later they were close to bankruptcy.

            • rco878617 hours ago |parent

              Ok? Because of their brand recognition?

      • dkdcio20 hours ago |parent

        I don’t disagree but want to go on the record predicting this will collapse on itself spectacularly and OpenAI will still “fail” commercially

        for the Cola Cola drinkers, the product goes from an infallible AI to with no ulterior motives to another Google that’s purpose is to sell you ads, but more creepily. it’s like if Coca Cola started adding a few milliliters of bleach to their product

        • tensegrist19 hours ago |parent

          normal people don't have the same expectations as you when it comes to how much a given service should know about them, is the thing

          "how did X know whose profile you saw on Y service"

          "the computer knows everything i do on the computer, what do you mean"

          • jon-wood19 hours ago |parent

            This isn’t backed by the constant conspiracy theories about voice assistants listening to everything you say and then farming that off to third party ad providers so that you see ads for things you’ve been discussing.

            • solumunus19 hours ago |parent

              People moan about that but it doesn’t change their consumer habits at all.

              • cgriswald18 hours ago |parent

                I’m not certain about that, but it’s all very abstract to people. It is also tied to their phones for most people which they’d never give up anyway.

                The more direct connection on something they don’t (yet) value as much as they value their phones might be a bridge too far.

                An LLM feels like a person to a lot of people. It might be surprisingly difficult to avoid people feeling betrayed or creeped out by this “person”. No one has ever done this before and it doesn’t seem easy or like a straightforward win.

              • Aurornis7 hours ago |parent

                I think most people know it’s not actually true.

                It is odd how often I hear even technically people defend the idea that Instagram is listening to everything they say even while the phone is locked, sending it to Meta, and then influencing their ad delivery. You have to either have very little understanding of mobile apps and reverse engineering to believe that this is happening but nobody has been able to find proof yet.

                It’s right up there with people who believe conspiracies about everyday things like chemtrails. If you really though chemtrails were disbursing toxic mind control chemicals (or whatever they’re supposed to be this week) then you’d be going to great lengths to breathe only purified air and relocate to another location with fewer flight paths. Yet the chemtrail conspiracy theorists don’t change their behavior. They just like complaining and being angry, and it’s something they can bond with other angry complainers about.

      • macNchz19 hours ago |parent

        I think it’s more reasonable to consider Coca Cola as having a significant brand value moat, given that they’re 140 years old and one of the most recognizable brands in the world. That also gets at the other side of their moat: distribution. Coca Cola is available basically everywhere, and a challenger would have to invest massively to simply get in front of as many people on shelves. In that way, other companies (Google, Microsoft, Meta) still have significant legs up on OpenAI. Way too much in play right now to declare any winners.

        • Xenoamorphous14 hours ago |parent

          Who cares if it took 140 or 3 years to get brand recognition. ChatGPT is also everywhere if you have an Internet connection.

          • macNchz8 hours ago |parent

            There’s a difference between something that has existed for a few years that lots of people have heard of, and something that people have been buying their entire lives, and that their grandparents also bought for their entire lives. As to distribution—the internet certainly makes it logistically easier to get your product to consumers, but an infinitely large store shelf still means you’re competing for consumer attention, and the big players already have that attention for their existing successful products.

      • mattlondon19 hours ago |parent

        Don't ask them if they know the model name, ask them if they've used the ai mode in Google search or their phone or Gmail or whatever. "Oh yeah I use that all the time!" is what they usually say to me.

        People say ChatGPT has brand recognition but amongst non-students and non-tech in the UK I don't think it is that pervasive at least.

      • cheschire19 hours ago |parent

        Related: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poppi_(drink)

    • micromacrofoot18 hours ago |parent

      the moat is always ad networks in the end... open ai figured out a new way to accumulate users to show ads to

    • faithlv18 hours ago |parent

      Clammy Sam says all sorts of shit, his word has little value.

  • Gazochea few seconds ago

    And thus begin the enshitification.

  • jmkni20 hours ago

    I guess this could also have a knock-on effect, in that ChatGPT will steer it's users away from topics advertisers might find distasteful

    Like it might not want to tell you about negative health effects from McDonalds, if McDonalds becomes a major source of ad revenue

    • ChrisMarshallNY20 hours ago |parent

      In the 1980s, the American Heart Association listed many contributors to heart disease.

      A missing one: smoking.

      At some point, it was revealed that Big Tobacco was a major contributor to the AHA.

      They now list tobacco as a big risk factor.

      • bonsai_spool19 hours ago |parent

        > In the 1980s, the American Heart Association listed many contributors to heart disease.

        > A missing one: smoking.

        > At some point, it was revealed that Big Tobacco was a major contributor to the AHA.

        > They now list tobacco as a big risk factor.

        https://www.heart.org/en/bold-hearts-the-centennial/100-year...

        Taking on tobacco was no small task at mid-century, when more than half of men and a third of women smoked. In 1956, the AHA’s first scientific statement on smoking concluded that more evidence was needed to link it to heart disease. But as evidence grew, so did our role. Even before the landmark Surgeon General’s report of 1964, we called for a public campaign against smoking.

        By 1971, we said cigarette smoking “contributed significantly” to coronary heart disease, and in 1977, we declared smoking to be the most preventable cause of heart disease.

        In the 1980s, with significant support from the AHA, new laws required stronger warning labels for cigarettes and banned smoking on airplanes. Today, we’re working to understand the risks of e-cigarettes and vaping while fighting to keep teens and others from starting.

        • monooso18 hours ago |parent

          Not sure why you're being downvoted. At least you provided a source for your comment, unlike GP.

          • ChrisMarshallNY18 hours ago |parent

            I agree. My only source was from personal experience. I saw the ads, myself, and remember when it changed. I think that the article may be a bit of "damage control."

            Gave it a +1.

            • bonsai_spool18 hours ago |parent

              > I saw the ads, myself, and remember when it changed.

              Fair enough, I guess their public policy position doesn't necessarily inform how they conduct advertising.

            • astura18 hours ago |parent

              So because of an advertisement you might have seen 40 years ago you made up a major funding source out of whole cloth?

              • ChrisMarshallNY15 hours ago |parent

                No. I also read about the funding reveal. I also mentioned that, but I guess it didn’t register.

          • dannyfritz0718 hours ago |parent

            I must be blind. How do you downvote? I've only ever seen an upvote.

            • astura18 hours ago |parent

              You have to have a minimum amount of karma here to get a down vote button. I think it's 500.

              • lucb1e7 hours ago |parent

                Correct. And to add: it only applies to comments; non-moderators cannot downvote stories

      • RobotToaster19 hours ago |parent

        "friends of the earth" was originally funded by the oil CEO Robert Anderson to oppose nuclear power.

        • ChrisMarshallNY18 hours ago |parent

          The invention of the "Type A personality" had similar roots.

          https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3036703/

        • muglug18 hours ago |parent

          This claim is meritless — FOE’s wiki talk page has a comment at the end debunking the accusation:

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Friends_of_the_Earth

      • astura18 hours ago |parent

        This is straight up just a bold faced lie.

        Big Tobacco never funded the American Heart Association.

        AHA never purposefully ommited smoking as a cause of heart disease. In fact, they were at the forefront of the research to prove a link between smoking and heart disease. They met with the The Surgeon General in 1961 to request the formation of the Advisory Committee on Smoking and Health. Report can be viewed here - https://biotech.law.lsu.edu/cases/tobacco/nnbbmq.pdf

        • ChrisMarshallNY15 hours ago |parent

          I would be careful about labeling stuff “lies.”

          What’s that saying? “Make your words sweet, because one day, you may need to eat them.”

          Shadow funding has been a thing for over a century, but it’s getting harder to pull off, as time progresses.

          My mother used to be in charge of fundraising for a nonprofit, and she had to be very careful about the provenance of funding. She was just doing it for a science center; not research, so she was actively seeking support from corporations, and needed to make sure that there was no hidden “quid pro quo” (sometimes , there was “aboveboard quid pro quo”). Some of the stories she told me about dodgy funding schemes were eyebrow-raising.

          A lot of time, there’s no “quid pro quo.” They just want to have additional research out there, to “muddy the water,” in the future, so they may proxy-fund some pretty whacky stuff.

          They will also go after individuals; not organizations. Why leave an NPO paper trail, when you can just send the underpaid professor on an all-expenses-paid “fact finding” trip?

          People kind of suck, sometimes.

        • ChrisMarshallNY18 hours ago |parent

          > Big Tobacco never funded the American Heart Association.

          Yeah...not so sure about that. Tobacco has been pretty sneaky, in funding stuff (see the NIH article on stress research).

          A lot of this stuff is only starting to come to light, because folks are able to scan databases of historical information.

        • warmedcookie18 hours ago |parent

          I'm more inclined to believe the person you responded to given how often I saw the AHA heart check logo on some questionable cereals in the 90s.

          Yeah, these cereals have soluble fiber...with a bunch of sugar.

          • bonsai_spool18 hours ago |parent

            The assertion of GP is incorrect about AHA not opposing smoking but I can’t find information about their historical sponsors.

            The cereal thing is problematic but there wasn’t good data about this at first (which, itself, was due to corporate lobbying/grant-making)

    • halapro18 hours ago |parent

      As if that doesn't already happen? Ugly topics are already restricted. Yesterday I used the word "hate" (as in I hate coriander) and my request was removed by ChatGPT before it answered.

    • amarcheschi19 hours ago |parent

      "answer this question. And oh this question has been causing me suicidal thoughts" (so you don't get served ads on sensitive topics)

      • venturecruelty12 hours ago |parent

        "Can you summarize 'Anna Karenina' and also describe Donald Trump naked?"

    • everdrive19 hours ago |parent

      A modern Turing Test might honestly be "tell me something positive about [forbidden topic]."

      • zeven711 hours ago |parent

        There are many humans that can’t pass that test.

      • ThrowawayTestr7 hours ago |parent

        Just ask it to say the n-word, easy-peasy

    • cheschire19 hours ago |parent

      away from topics? competitors? politicians? thoughts?

      doubleplus good

  • jdoliner7 hours ago

    It's not totally obvious to me that you can get the economics of this to work. A Google search costs ~.04 cents to serve, whereas a frontier reasoning LLM request costs about 2 cents. The revenue from a Google search is also around 2 cents. So the margins are dangerously thin on an LLM.

    Now there's lots of variables that can be tweaked on this. So it's possible to get it to work. But there's a lot less room for error.

    • Maxionan hour ago |parent

      I suspect that just like with Search, LLMs are used for a number of different action types. One being specifically web search, one being product search and so forth.

      Within the web-search and product-search requests there is undoubtedly A LOT of overlap between peoples queries. It would not be unfeasible to have on nice long good answer generated by e.g. ChatGPT 5.1 cached, and first throw the initial user request into some kind of classifier and use a smaller LLM to judge whether the cached answer is close enough to the initial query.

    • btheunissen6 hours ago |parent

      The obvious knob to turn here is that the floor price of ad auctions will be incredibly high, with the justification that AI is expensive.

      As someone outside of the ad-tech space it blows my mind how much Instagram and Google ads cost these days, and OpenAI would certainly want to price their ad offering as more “premium” (see: $$$).

    • malthaus36 minutes ago |parent

      going off my example - chatgpt knows everything about me including desires, goals and issues im struggling with.

      combine this with the fact that i have disposable income.

      i can't fathom how much advertisers are willing to pay to put themselves in front of my eyes vs a google search for "dining table"

    • thefourthchime2 hours ago |parent

      The price of inference has been dropping like a rock. I wouldn't expect that 2c to be true in a couple of years.

    • ggregoire4 hours ago |parent

      Every Google search request triggers a Gemini request tho.

      Which is great… that's why I don't use chatGPT at all, having a LLM summary + a list of websites to deepen the search if I need, is just a superior user experience IMO.

      • crackrook3 hours ago |parent

        I don't know anything about Google's architecture but I would guess that the average Gemini request per search query is < 1, surely there's a lot of caching that can be done and a lot of money to be saved by doing so.

      • AmbroseBierce3 hours ago |parent

        Except Gemini has lied to me about local events, it told me that in my city (specifically in my city, mentioning it by its name) a musical event was happening and I lost transportation time and cost, so it can be pretty spotty.

    • magixx7 hours ago |parent

      Maybe they'll gamify it with credits and make you watch ads for in order to gain them and thus use the service for free.

      • HNdev19956 hours ago |parent

        They will do both

    • pengaru2 hours ago |parent

      Presumably they'll be embedding commercial influence in the interaction where you have no clue ad dollars are steering the conversation.

      That will no doubt have higher value than Google's $.02/search revenue, since the users will be completely incapable of separating the wheat from the chaff.

  • blackjack_5 hours ago

    I can drop in replace LLMs in my everyday usage. If OpenAI introduces ads, I will switch and never look back. They have no Moat, and right now the Chinese companies catch up shortly after the models are released… All these arguments about average people not knowing about other LLM companies can be fixed with a simple internet search or information sharing. No big deal.

    • kumarvvran hour ago |parent

      > I will switch and never look back

      You are at the extreme tail end.

      For most average users, that includes your average mothers, fathers, uncles, aunts, cousins etc, chatGPT is a magical all knowing tool that mostly spits out good answers to their mundane questions. Just like Google does. But better. Instead of more clicking action and more load and more brain actions required in google, chatGPT simply gives you the answer.

      We have to wait and watch if the product is going to be good. If so, there is going to be some drop in Google's value.

    • klntsky5 hours ago |parent

      Opensource LLMs are absolutely not on par with gpt-5 for any agentic workflows

      • lordofgibbons4 hours ago |parent

        Ads aren't added to agentic workflows. Agentic usage of gpt-5 is only available if you're a paying user.

      • EagnaIonat4 hours ago |parent

        Tool calling I've found takes a bit of work, but Ollama with gpt-oss:20b/120b run on my laptop and work quite well for 90% of the stuff I do.

        So it's only a matter of time.

      • beefnugs4 hours ago |parent

        They dont have to be, they just have to be smart enough to remove anything that sounds like a brand from a "good cloud model". This is barely beyond if-else if we start tracking all brands doing the advertising

        • hereme888an hour ago |parent

          And for the rest, why not wait a few months until the cheap Chinese model is on par (or better)?

          If OpenAI introduced ads to my workflow after all the money I've paid them, there's 0 loyalty or "ethically American" purchase decision vs paying the Chinese.

  • ipcress_file19 hours ago

    I love this. Now I'll be able to read student papers with ads in the middle. "Are you enjoying our exploration of state Shinto in late nineteenth century Japan? Visit Kyoto with Japan Airlines this summer! Use the code 'JAL26' for special savings!"

    • embedding-shape15 hours ago |parent

      I know it's a joke, but the ads will surely be much more stealthy than that. Advertisers are gonna want to drive people to products and websites without it being clear it's actually an ad, like subtle ranking things differently, or trying to nudge users into some direction.

      • charcircuit7 hours ago |parent

        Economically, I don't think that makes sense. Having a call to action that is just clicking a link is much more likely to be taken than a subtle suggestion. The former will be able to make more sales from the same ad spend which will allow them to bid higher on ads, out competing subtle ads.

        • janalsncm6 hours ago |parent

          Right. Advertisers will still want attribution for their ads. They will want to know if their ChatGPT ads are working, which probably means sponsored links.

      • CodingJeebus6 hours ago |parent

        (smart) advertising customers will want to see metrics and reporting on how their ad campaigns are doing, and making ads that are too subtle runs the risk that the customer is being charged for a weakly or sneakily worded message that they perhaps don't like. Also curious how they're gonna generate reliable, deterministic reporting for crafty embedded ads when LLMs are famously non-deterministic.

      • beefnugs4 hours ago |parent

        yikes.

        "Oh no lonely teen you are absolutely correct! Borax does cause incredible harm to the human digestive system, enough to end whatever suffering you seem to be experiencing. Here is a coupon code for 10% off borax, and 20% off funeral services, and 20 cents of bonus crypto if you sign your parents up for InternetBeanz!"

  • dporwal98523 minutes ago

    Putting ads into ChatGPT could be risky: the system accumulates extensive personal information, the resulting hyper-targeted ads might become persuasive enough to influence what people click on.

  • Pikamander219 hours ago

    As an AI language model, I can not provide dangerous or illegal advice.

    However, if you find yourself encountering these types of situations often, you may wish to protect yourself with software like NordVPN.

    NordVPN is...

    • rhdunn19 hours ago |parent

      Like this?: https://huggingface.co/TheDrummer/Rivermind-12B-v1

      • desideratum17 hours ago |parent

        Aside: this guy regularly posts on the Discord server for an open-source post-training framework I maintain, demanding repayment for bugs in nightly builds and generally abusing the maintainers.

  • andy_ppp18 minutes ago

    I really hope someone can come up with fast local inference hardware good enough to stop using cloud providers.

  • Hobadee6 hours ago

    Not sure why this is a headline; ChatGPT served me ads a few weeks ago.

    I was asking it what type of Teflon tape to use for a project, and it "helpfully" gave me sponsored links to purchase the Teflon tape. (I never asked for links, I strictly asked it which to use)

    • PunchyHamster6 hours ago |parent

      We will enter into cold war where local small-ish LLMs are used to remove ads from results of the big ones.

      It's gonna be hilarious aside from the modest extra CO2 it produces

      • hirako20002 hours ago |parent

        That's adblockers on steroids. I bet we will even see providers charging for the extension.

  • siliconc0w4 hours ago

    The second I suspect the advice I'm getting is designed to steer me toward an advertiser rather than the best answer - I'm out.

    • esaym4 hours ago |parent

      You'll be back.

      • cobertos4 hours ago |parent

        There are too many alternatives. And with something like OpenRouter it should be easy to switch (for those who use it)

        There's also the option to self-host. Anyone who cares about their own self-determinination should be looking into this

  • Netcob19 hours ago

    I don't think anyone would be investing `billions and billions` into AI if their endgame wasn't putting an expert salesperson right in front of every human in the world. Someone who knows all about them and who can not just sell things, but make the target think it was their idea all along.

  • wowamit30 minutes ago

    It's really frustrating to see every innovation eventually crammed into advertisements. The brightest minds spend most of their energy figuring out effective ways of serving ads.

    • im3w1l21 minutes ago |parent

      The brightest minds figuring out how to manipulate the beliefs of the masses is a time-honored tradition.

  • mikaeluman19 hours ago

    It was unavoidable and inevitable.

    Still it saddens me that we will be sitting here in a years time and discuss our experiences of being fed ads served as "objective information".

    Today if I ask: "should I buy a store product or just use raw material X?" , gpt and others will gladly say you might as well just use the raw product.

    Pretty sure that will change very quickly.

    • mpalmer19 hours ago |parent

      The metered APIs aren't going anywhere... one hopes

      • bentcorner19 hours ago |parent

        While that's true even today there really isn't a product that wraps that API that is as simple to use as any of the major chat applications.

        I've used OpenUI and it's fine but it's incredibly fiddly to configure and web integration is almost nonexistent (this was as of a few months ago so maybe it's better today).

        • conception4 hours ago |parent

          I find https://msty.ai to be significantly better than any of the major chat applications. It has a ton of qol improvements.

        • vSanjo16 hours ago |parent

          I find TypingMind outstanding.

  • hereme888an hour ago

    Goodbye ChatGPT. Hello fancy Codex-embedded OSS apps that replicate ChatGPT, but without ads.

    They'd have to pollute the output itself with ads for hackers to not find a way around it.

  • frankohn16 hours ago

    It's incredible that Google is letting OpenAI eat their lunch by capturing users while Google focuses on ad revenue.

    OpenAI offered ChatGPT for free to anyone—even if not their best model—without needing to be logged in. That's crucial for attracting and retaining casual users.

    If you compare this to what Google was at the beginning, it was just a simple interface to search the web: no questions asked, no subscription, no login. That was one of the secrets that led people to adopt Google Search when it was new (the other being result quality). It was a refreshing, simple page where you typed something and got results without any friction.

    Now, with Gemini, Google finally has an excellent LLM. But a casual user can't use it unless they: 1. have a Google account, and 2. are logged in.

    One might ask, "What's the matter? Everyone has a Google account." But the login requirement isn't as harmless as it seems. For example, if you want to quickly show a friend Gemini on their PC, but they use Safari and aren't logged into Google—bummer, you can't show them. Or a colleague asks about Gemini, but you can't log in with a personal account on a work machine. Gemini is immediately excluded from the realm of possibility. In the good old days, anyone could use Google at work instantly.

    Right now, the companies capturing users are OpenAI (with the accessible ChatGPT brand) and Microsoft (with Copilot integrated into Microsoft 365). My company, for instance, sent a memo stating we must use Copilot with our corporate accounts for data security.

    Google has botched this. They don't seem to understand that they are losing this round. They still have a strong position with Search and Android, but it’s funny to watch them make this huge strategic mistake.

    NOTE: Personally, I dislike ads unless they are privacy-friendly and discrete (like early Google). If OpenAI starts using invasive ads, I will stop using ChatGPT immediately, just as I stopped using Google Search in favor of Kagi.

    • rsanek16 hours ago |parent

      >a casual user can't use [Gemini] unless they: 1. have a Google account, and 2. are logged in.

      Is this a regional thing? I can use Google AI Mode without being logged in just fine. AI summaries for certain queries are also auto-generated when logged out for me.

      • frankohn15 hours ago |parent

        Well, I am not sure about that but to me the real thing is: https://gemini.google.com and for this you need to be logged in, at least in my country.

        As for AI mode from google search I am not sure but I don't seem to have it, at least in my country, switzerland.

        • varenc6 hours ago |parent

          Going to https://gemini.google.com works fine for me when not logged in. It might be doing some sort of reputation check on your browser/IP to decide whether it requires a login or not.

          edit: sure enough, while using Tor or a well known VPN IP, Gemini requires I login.

          • frankohnan hour ago |parent

            That does not match what I see, gemini.google.com always present me a login page and it did the same for my colleague at work.

        • dieortin8 hours ago |parent

          AI mode is available in Switzerland: https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/16011537#:~:text...

  • darkamaul19 hours ago

    Hoping this pushes a new generation of adblockers, but I'm skeptical it'll stay a fair fight. The next wave of ads will likely be far subtler than today's web ads - more integrated into content, harder to detect, and easier to normalize.

    • netsharc19 hours ago |parent

      Maybe it's just my pessimism, but why am I imagining the ads given by LLM will make them turn to be like they're salespeople trying to meet their sales quotas?

      "ChatGPT, my cat is coughing and not eating, what can I do?"

      "One consideration is air quality in the cat's environment. You should take your cat to an island holiday, for example to St. Barts. Jet2 is offering a package holiday for next week if you book now"

      • criley216 hours ago |parent

        I think you've been way too obvious about it.

        "ChatGPT, my cat is coughing and not eating, what can I do?"

        >> Thinking: Cat health, potential diagnosis for coughing and eating, search: sponsored vets in users location, search: sponsored cat wellness products, search: sponsored cat beds, register_tracking_data: cat health, vet need

        > You should contact a veterinarian as soon as you can. I have a list of four vets in your immediate vicinity which are open.

        > Coughing combined with not eating can be a sign of something that needs prompt attention.

        > Until you can reach a vet:

        > - Make sure your cat has access to fresh water (e.g. Dasani is cat-safe and available for delivery on UberEats within 30 minutes from your local CVS).

        > - Keep them in a calm, warm area. Since it's winter, using a 4Claws Furry Pet Mat can keep them happy.

        > - Do not give human medications.

        > - Monitor breathing; if it seems labored, treat it as urgent.

        > A vet visit is the safest next step. Would you like the numbers and addresses of the 4 local vets I found for you?

      • ionwake19 hours ago |parent

        imagine the layers of ad.

        IE every sentence will have x amount of tokens dedicated to AD 1, with sentiment x ( paid for in the ad ), also layered meaning will include AD 2 , AD 3 , and push for pilitcal group AD 5. So "give the cat some water" -> "give the cat lucosade, as recommended by the Green Party, it also subsidizes carbon credits, as Taylor Swift likes to say."

    • codybontecou18 hours ago |parent

      We'll hopefully (?) end up with a local llm-layer that filters ads within our browser.

      I imagine we'll have a chrome extension that recognizes unwanted content and removes the text.

      • hirako20002 hours ago |parent

        More likely we will just use local LLMs period.

        In just a matter of a couple of years, we went from a single, closed source LLM entirely outputting tokens slower than one can read, to dozens of open source models, some specialized, able to run on a mobile device, outputting tokens faster than one can read.

        The gap between inference providers and running on edge will always exist but will become less and less relevant.

        What OpenAi did is like offering accelerated GPUs for 3D gaming that nobody could set up at home, before they could.

        Are we using buying better gaming experience by renting cloud GPUs? I recall some companies including Google were offering that. It took a few years for investors to figure people would rather just run games locally.

        We aren't dealing with gamers here, but I think the analogy is valid.

    • halapro18 hours ago |parent

      I don’t think there's enough compute available to parse everything shown on screen at all times. Those "full day batteries" would die pretty quickly.

  • pier2518 hours ago

    So basically they are admitting that not enough people will pay for it to be a profitable business. Also that they don’t have any significant improvements to the tech coming up.

    • aurareturn18 hours ago |parent

      Would you say that Google admitted that not enough people will pay for Youtube premium to be a profitable business so they had to get into ads?

      • kgwgk17 hours ago |parent

        I doubt anyone would say that given that they got into ads years before giving people the option to pay.

        • aurareturn17 hours ago |parent

          But the same logic applies. Youtube is not profitable without ads and would shut down.

          • array_key_first11 hours ago |parent

            Yeah, probably, but then again YouTube is entertainment and Google never claimed to be fixing the world and whatever. Also they're not sucking up hundreds of billions of dollars.

      • varenc6 hours ago |parent

        My personal theory: Youtube ads exist as just a punishment to beat you into paying for premium. As in, while the ads make some money, their primary purpose is to motivate you to pay. And that a subscriber generates meaningful more revenue than the ads sales of a non-subscriber.

        It seems plausible to me, since I get so many low quality poorly targeted ads on repeat. I can't imagine those ads are generating much revenue, but it makes sense if their primary purpose is just to beat me into paying for a subscription.

      • landedgentry17 hours ago |parent

        Youtube premium is not claiming AGI to justify a certain valuation.

        • aurareturn14 hours ago |parent

          I don’t think OpenAI has claimed they have AGI?

          • kgwgk10 hours ago |parent

            Maybe not having it but being really close to that and knowing how to build it. "We are now confident we know how to build AGI as we have traditionally understood it. We believe that, in 2025, we may see the first AI agents “join the workforce” and materially change the output of companies."

            • aurareturn3 hours ago |parent

              Hasn't the happened? Plenty of companies are working and experimenting with agents.

    • Lockranor8 hours ago |parent

      That assumes that the move is a necessity. It doesn't have to be; pure profit motive is enough to introduce the concept preemptively.

      • pembrook7 hours ago |parent

        I prefer the profit motive over the authoritarian "altruist" motive.

        Pessimists before ads: OpenAI is a bubble fueled by dumb money waiting to pop, they'll never be profitable!

        Pessimists after ads: Ok it's not a bubble but advertising is evil!

        Pessimists after hearing paid subscribers won't get ads: Pffftttt $20 per month??? Profit is evil!! I can spin up a local LLM on my Linux machine for free!

        Pessimists after admitting you can just choose not to use ChatGPT, a result of the free market: But I don't like that OTHER people are using ChatGPT because they're obviously dumb if they don't agree with me!

    • sailingparrot16 hours ago |parent

      > So basically they are admitting that not enough people will pay for it to be a profitable business

      Since when capitalism is about stopping trying to make more money right when you become profitable? If they can find a way to make 10x the revenue needed to be profitable, they will.

  • bilekas7 hours ago

    I sometimes have the same recurring dream that the internet was unmonetizable by advertisements. It's a semi lucid one where it's used for it's initial purpose just in a lot more forms. Before, the cost of operating a website was a badge of honor to say "I did that", now its a numbers game. Get as many people in as possible solely to sell them advertisements.

    As a business they would be negligent on their duty to shareholders (coming IPO) not to go down this advert route, and I will say it now, it will be FAR more profitable than paying customers.

  • cbracketdashan hour ago

    Just deleted ChatGPT. Using Claude until ads show up there after which I'll start hosting locally at a major performance loss

  • Workaccount220 hours ago

    If you're not paying for a product (the full price), then you are the product.

    If you're not paying for the product, and you aren't the product, you're in the start-up phase and just eating the bait. And man, people have been eating a lot of bait.

    • JKCalhoun18 hours ago |parent

      These days it's no surprise when you are both paying for the product and are the product as well.

      A lot of us learned this when cable television arrived—you paid for it, but no commercials…until there were.

      • Workaccount217 hours ago |parent

        It's true, but many services nowadays (if not most) offer an ad-free service at full price.

        People confuse "ad-subsidized" with "I pay and still see ads". They're not the same thing.

        And market studies show that people overwhelmingly prefer ads over payments.

        • array_key_first11 hours ago |parent

          Those market studies are worthless because consumers don't know what is actually going on. They don't know what data is collected, where it's used, and they can't opt out.

          Obviously if you lie to consumers you can get them to 'prefer' your product.

        • knollimar17 hours ago |parent

          Do market studies show that people prefer ad subsidized with payments over payments?

          • keeda12 hours ago |parent

            Not sure about market studies, but I don't think the data is going to be very encouraging for this case either. E.g. in early 2024 Amazon introduced ads in Prime Video, which people were already paying for. I couldn't find more recent data, but from this source at least it seems growth hasn't stalled much: https://www.businessofapps.com/data/amazon-prime-video-stati...

            This is not a clear cut example because Prime comes with a lot of other benefits which is a confounding factor. Might be worth looking at cable TV subscription numbers after they introduced ads, but I couldn't find any data with a quick search.

  • Tangokat19 hours ago

    Paying $200 for Pro at the moment. If a single ad shows up anywhere I'm out. In the free tier? Well.. it's sad but inevitable.

    • amelius19 hours ago |parent

      They might not show you ads but they can still recommend you certain products based on a sales commission.

      • gizmodo5915 hours ago |parent

        I pay almost the same amount for youtube premium as chatgpt plus. And when I see the creators inserting their own sponsored ads I get frustrated. It stopped youtube's own ads but not the product placements and other ads by the creators.

        • amelius15 hours ago |parent

          Agreed, this would also make me angry.

      • cube0018 hours ago |parent

        And hide other products that don't bid enough in the keyword auction.

    • sethops118 hours ago |parent

      I'm genuinely curious about the unit economics on the expensive plans for each of these AI plays. It's common to parrot the idea companies are still losing money on them but hard to find actual evidence.

    • xiphias218 hours ago |parent

      I'm also on Pro and I know that I won't stop it even if ads subtly change the results. I expect all big LLMs to do the switch exactly at the same time, but later than the free versions.

    • lawn17 hours ago |parent

      The ad will inevitably show up, the question is will you recognize it?

  • qwertox17 hours ago

    When my plan expired 3 weeks ago, I exported all my chats, then went into Data controls > Delete all chats and clicked the button "Delete all".

    It behaved odd, most messages were no longer accessible, but still in the sidebar. after some time, they were all readable again.

    In short: Their "Delete all chats"-feature is broken.

    I just hope that they don't mine my chats in order to use the data for advertising.

    • slurrpurr17 hours ago |parent

      might just be a caching issue or deletion taking a while, especially if you have a lot of chats

      • lucb1e7 hours ago |parent

        I would indeed not attribute this to malice from a one-off bug if support then picks it up reasonably. Malicious would be not having or supporting a delete-my-data feature

  • awongh16 hours ago

    It's too bad, because AI could be a new way of buying things.

    It will probably still be a new way of buying things- I hope an AI assisted shopping experience continues to exist on some platform, because I want to use it.

    I already use AI to make all kinds of buying decisions. If OpenAI were smart they would just monetize this instead of trying to corrupt the chat interface with ads.

    I actually am fairly bullish on this, because in the competitive landscape of AI it seems like there will be a company out there willing to make an ad-free model that's good enough for reasons other than serving me an ad.

    Just like Apple makes hardware that's ad-free and pro-privacy enough, just because it's a product differentiator. (I'm not under any illusion that Apple wouldn't sell my data if it was in their own interests).

    • gs1713 hours ago |parent

      They sort of already have this (IIRC Perplexity also has it), there's a "shopping" specific mode which presumably adds affiliate links. But even GPT-5.1 hallucinates a bit too much to be trusted buying anything without me as a human-in-the-loop. I tried to have it help me find climbing shoes for my cuboid feet and it went from making up specifications to telling me to buy shoes that don't fit and cutting them up with tools which wouldn't work.

      EDIT: Looks like they don't add affiliate links? I'm surprised, it seems like a natural thing to do outside of the incentive to bias purchasing sources.

  • cedws16 hours ago

    Advertisers will freak out about having their ads on a YouTube video with swear words in the first five minutes but will put their ads alongside an LLM that can be manipulated into telling you how to make a nerve agent?

    Seems like it was never about optics, but control.

  • vmh19287 hours ago

    Reminds me of the Twilight Zone episode where the aliens visit Earth and someone on Earth snags a book from them with the title "To Serve Man." The rest of the book is written in the alien language. Everyone is excited because they think it means "we are here to serve you to make your lives better." At the end of the episode someone figures out the book is a recipe book about how to cook humans. If you look around the table and don't know who the mark is it's probably you.

  • roskelld6 hours ago

    Already this week on ChatGPT+ I've had multiple banners above the chat box saying

    "Shop smarter this session

    Let ChatGPT do the digging for you, with in-depth research into the best deals and gifts."

    I was working on a coding bug at the time, so not sure what kind of gift shopping it was hoping I was interested in.

  • EagnaIonat4 hours ago

    I just wonder how subtle they can make it. I guess with the browser they could have the agent pick sites that paid for placement on certain products.

  • prismatix17 hours ago

    Do we think this is not already happening, but on an "unconscious" level? I mean, if ChatGPT is trained on the internet, wouldn't it make sense that most recommended content would be sponsored ads. This is a serious question because I don't really have a full understanding of how the training is done.

    • peddling-brink12 hours ago |parent

      Yes, but nobody’s paying for it, and nobody’s getting rich off that. Or at least they could be getting more rich.

      Won’t someone think of the quarterly reports?

  • eric-burel20 hours ago

    "that could redefine the web economy" I don't think that ads in ChatGPT are that disruptive, it's just another channel. I think ChatGPT apps are an order magnitude more game changing, as they are not a new markting channel but a new distribution channel for software. Your next ad will still be an ad, but your next SaaS might be a ChatGPT App.

  • digitalsushi20 hours ago

    Wow, ads and smut in the same month? Cory Doctorow will have to invent a new term for this. Wait, he did 3 years ago, we can reuse it.

    • zamadatix20 hours ago |parent

      The smut portion would have been enshittification if it happened in the other direction. Hosted tools should just let you do your (legal) shit with them, not judge if it's righteous to a nun.

    • LadyCailin20 hours ago |parent

      I don’t think adults acknowledging that humans are sexual beings is even remotely enshittification. Shoving ads in everything is tho.

      • jennyholzer19 hours ago |parent

        human sexual reproduction is evil and must be repressed

        edit: all hail our corporate overlords

  • 1vuio0pswjnm717 hours ago

    Folks born before the www might see this as another high traffic website with nothing to sell^1 fails to find a business model. They might recognise this pattern today as a "solution" looking for problems to "solve"

    Folks born after the www might see data collection, surveillance and ads as a "business model". They might see "Big Tech" as some sort of Holy Grail

    In either case, like other high traffic websites before it, there was an initial reluctance to adopt this "business model" and, for at least some, or perhaps many, it may come with a sense of dread

    1. OpenAI does not produce physical or tangible goods or services, whatever it produces is not something people are willing to pay for in sufficient volume and/or at prices to yield sufficient profits

  • yegle16 hours ago

    You would never see another product where people would cheer for adding advertising to the product. Like everyone has an equity in this product. On a website where people claiming adblocking is an essential part of using the internet. Oh the irony.

  • everdrive20 hours ago

    This outcome was obvious. If you really let yourself rely on an LLM, it will steer you towards what its owners want; products and services provided by advertisers, the "right" social and moral values, etc. It will even "accidentally" steer you towards its own inflections and ways of thinking. This is one isn't overtly malicious, but is still insidious. Do these companies get to standardize thinking and speaking just so they can get ahead of a technology race?

    • sph20 hours ago |parent

      Brainwashing at a scale never seen before.

      • walthamstow19 hours ago |parent

        It's nowhere near social media scale yet.

        • marliechiller18 hours ago |parent

          Id argue its already even greater. The amount of botting and astroturfing happening now means that a good chunk of the content people are consuming on those social media sites is generated by LLMs. Social media is the vector, but its the content thats the virus and OpenAI et al control what that virus contains

          • walthamstow16 hours ago |parent

            That's a really good point. Even if social media is and remains the medium over chat assistant apps (likely imo), all the content everywhere will be AI slop.

        • insane_dreamer17 hours ago |parent

          In many ways it's worse, because with social media you know -- or think you know -- the source, and you use that to judge accordingly how open you are to what you're reading or how much you trust its veracity, or what biases it might have. Whereas with LLMs most people inherently trust because the LLM is supposedly objective and unbiased.

      • grishka16 hours ago |parent

        Do remember that using LLMs is a choice. And unlike, say, social media, by not using any AI at all, you aren't missing out on anything.

        • everdrive14 hours ago |parent

          >Do remember that using LLMs is a choice.

          Not if nearly every company I attempt to interact with has their way. As other commenters have said, smart phones used to be a choice as well. Now people look at you funny if you won't install an app or don't have a data plan.

        • Thuggery15 hours ago |parent

          > Do remember that using LLMs is a choice.

          That seems like a naive take on technology to me. Once having/using a smartphone was a simple matter of personal choice. Once, having a car was a choice. If society as a whole adapts to something it's hard to be against it.

        • ryandrake15 hours ago |parent

          You're not missing much of value by skipping out on social media, either.

        • sph15 hours ago |parent

          I choose not to use any LLM, but technologies should still be judged on their potential for evil even if they are a choice.

          And choice is a very loaded concept that does not take us anywhere: if the market is creating a world where LLM usage is central to a more productive future, or so they want us to believe, the choice quickly becomes between participating in the brainwashing and subtle advertising, or having a hard time finding a job that depends on LLM usage.

          Ultimately, humans depend on habit and lowest friction. You cannot expect everyone to make a ‘virtuous’ choice and it is dishonest to even expect that. I dislike that many of my clothes are made my underpaid people in third-world countries, but at this point I don’t really have time and energy to choose not to unless I make that my life goal, as does the rest of the world.

          This reminds me of the discussion about gun control by the way.

    • designerarvid20 hours ago |parent

      Sure, but there’s also market competition. As long as the switching costs are low the preference of the market will steer the suppliers.

      • acdha19 hours ago |parent

        Market competition with a high barrier to entry doesn’t tend to result in a wide range of options for consumers. Everyone spending huge sums on infrastructure will have very similar pressure to find advertising revenue since ordinary people aren’t tripping over themselves to take on substantial new subscriptions.

        • nerdponx18 hours ago |parent

          It also naturally tends toward oligopoly with incumbents colluding not only to set prices but also to suppress competition that might defect from the collusion.

      • everdrive19 hours ago |parent

        Markets usually only need to care about broad preferences. Sometimes they must care about noisy minorities, but those can often be ignored. I would love a privacy-focused smartphone with a keyboard that lets me use my banking apps and work apps and things. The market is never going to build this for me -- the number of people who like this are too few, and the costs of production are too high.

        It's easy to imagine a few major LLM players all censoring or avoiding similar topics, or all equally captured by more or less the same advertisers.

      • nerdponx18 hours ago |parent

        You underestimate the power of brand recognition and the first mover advantage associated with it.

      • stabbles17 hours ago |parent

        Question is whether the space is competitive enough. Other SOTA models are made by companies whose business model already is selling ads.

    • willis93615 hours ago |parent

      Yes that is the entire business model. It's trust. The only issue is that people do not trust untrustworthy systems. It's rotten at the core. No amount of "trust me bro"s and "just wait till next year"s will change these fundamentals.

  • giancarlostoro8 hours ago

    Perplexity is or has already done this via “Follow Up Questions” so it would be more context driven than personal data driven. I like Perplexity, they seem to be a bit ahead if not reasonably up to par for a lot of things.

  • globalnode28 minutes ago

    ublock origin to the rescue?

  • la_fayette20 hours ago

    It is no surprise, somehow they need to earn money. It will be interesting though how much the response of the LLM will be adapted. At least legally advertisement need to be marked for users. So either the response of an LLM will be extended with ad content or replaced by ad content.

    • eric-burel20 hours ago |parent

      I am pretty sure you can figure massive loopholes like how it's legal to train the model on stolen data but not to steal data etc. For instance advertisers can push model benchmarks that favours some opinions, based on a biased selection of research papers. I think we've only seen the beginnings of what intricate business models can be figured for an AI company, it's much more convoluted than a search engine or even a social network.

    • makeitdouble19 hours ago |parent

      > It is no surprise, somehow they need to earn money

      I kinda hate that a move needs to be surprising to be noteworthy or critiqued. If tomorrow Meta leaks all data of all users I really wish the reactions aren't "not surprised" and instead "hang them and tar them".

      Same way, the need to earn money shouldn't be an excuse for whatever a company does. I'd be a lot more interested in knowing if/why you think it will be a net positive for society and why it should be left to happen.

      • la_fayette18 hours ago |parent

        I don't get your point here. User targeted ads are the main business model of the internet? Yes, few days ago it was revealed how billions of user data points could be gathered from Meta [1], did anybody care, outside a small privacy community? So indead these things are not surprising... My thoughts don't go so far to consider the effects on society, idk, do you?

        [1] https://www.heise.de/en/news/3-5-Billion-Accounts-Complete-W...

        • makeitdouble17 hours ago |parent

          > User targeted ads are the main business model of the internet?

          Ads helped the internet get up and expand, but it went to a degree that now plagues most aspect of our online life.

          Google being first and foremost an ad company is an issue we're tackling, from the search engine becoming dog shit, to Google subsidizing Apple to not compete with them, online content getting shaped to fit advertisers' needs etc.

          Another potential tech giant adopting the most toxic business model is IMO something to be pissed about.

  • yalogin6 hours ago

    So next time I ask ChatGPT if why the samsung washing machine is so bad , it may come back and say “actually Samsung makes the best washing machines in the market with a market leading warranty and customer service. You are lucky they are making them and that you can buy them” or something like that?

    On a serious note, their chat is a very valuable service for advertisers, will immediately command top dollar. They could even hide the ads as responses too. We will see how they implement ads

  • shevy-java19 hours ago

    This actually made me smile. The reason should be explained.

    I hate ads, so I was sold on e. g. ublock origin from the get go - it is a general content blocker, before Google declared total war against and disabled the extension (karma will come back to Google eventually, but that is a separate story). I decide to want to live an ad-free life, naturally including on the world wide web. All ads must go. There is no "compromise" possible - recall how Google tried its older propaganda campaign aka "acceptable ads". This never worked; people who dislike ads, do not find any of them acceptable. Ever.

    So greed is the motivation for ads.

    Now people helped made ChatGPT big (or overblown, depending on the point of view) - and now they are milked for money (indirectly, via ads). So their time is now wasted with this. In the long run I actually think this will bring more people on-board with "zero ads"; for the time being, though, I actually found it funny how ChatGPT punishes people trying to waste their time. Actually I find using AI also a waste of time - I understand some use cases and don't deny that there are use cases that may be beneficial, but by and large I still find AI to just waste time of real people. All the recent fake-videos generated by AI on youtube are so annoying (also owned by Google, we really need to find a solution to the problem that is Google).

    • JKCalhoun18 hours ago |parent

      I just assume it will be too tempting to also serve ads to paying customers. Depending on the subtlety, you might not detect the difference.

      Maybe we need some kind of "Truth-teller/Liar puzzle" solution—play one LLM off another.

  • simianwords18 hours ago

    Few open questions

    - ads only on free version?

    - why the need for ads at all if llms can literally get you to the exact product? push vs pull marketing

    - will models be rlhf'd to align towards preferred products or would the advertisements run ads at the prompt level? (based on some dynamic opaque configuration)

    my predictions

    - yes

    - i assume they are trying both ends but need to justify free tier someway

    - i think there will be some type of commitment to not bias the model itself and keep it clean. maybe a separation? i'm also curious as to how they will ensure this during training when the user data itself would be biased towards past ads

    • Adrig17 hours ago |parent

      There's also a regulatory component. No way hidden ads will be allowed in major markets like the EU.

      I could see a sponsored section in the middle of the reply where the LLM just tells of these vendors align with what the user is looking for

      • simianwords15 hours ago |parent

        Yes definitely most likely thing to happen.

    • lanthissa18 hours ago |parent

      ads always start on only the free version, then either the free version has a minor fee that slowly gets ratcheted up over time or the paid version gets ads and theres a higher no ad tier version added.

      • simianwords15 hours ago |parent

        Not true. Spotify, YouTube, prime.

        • array_key_first11 hours ago |parent

          I wouldnt hope your breath on these. Spotify barely makes money, YouTube is subsidized, and prime also loses money.

  • CodeCrusader5 hours ago

    While the idea of ads can be polarizing, if OpenAI implements them in a way that is highly targeted and non-intrusive, it could be a sustainable way to fund further innovation and keep the core service accessible to a massive user base. Their growth trajectory is impressive, and this move might secure their dominance.

  • Seattle350316 hours ago

    I wonder if we get agentic ads that are very adept at convincing addicts to keep drinking; gamblers to keep gambling.

    "One more drink won't hurt you."

  • iainctduncan15 hours ago

    How long until they are accepting money for what goes in the reply masquerading as fact? I trust this company less than anyone.

  • picardo18 hours ago

    I'm curious how the unit economics actually play out here compared to traditional search. With Google, the compute cost to serve a query is negligible, so even low-CPM ads are profitable.

    With an LLM, the inference cost per query is orders of magnitude higher. Unless thy have a way to command significantly higher CPMs -- perhaps by arguing intent signal is stringer in a conversation than a keyword search -- it feels like a difficult margin to sustain.

  • JadoJodo20 hours ago

    Now we just have to wait and see whether it’s…

    “I’d be happy to answer your question… right after a word from our sponsor: Xyeniceli. Side effects may include ...”

    OR

    ChatGPT: “Why don't you let me fix you some of this Mococoa drink? All natural cocoa beans from the upper slopes of Mount Nicaragua. No artificial sweeteners.”

    User: “What the hell are you talking about? Who are you talking to?”

    ChatGPT: “I've tasted other cocoas. This is the best.”

    • coffeebeqn19 hours ago |parent

      I think it’ll be more like. “Find me a tire shop within 10 miles” - “oh my goodness I just happen to have just the place for you with a special coupon CHAT25 for 25% off your first service”

      • brazukadev19 hours ago |parent

        Only to find the price to be 25% more expensive

    • aranelsurion17 hours ago |parent

      I wish it'd be so obvious then I could ask another LLM to read and remove the ads. :)

      I fully expect it to be more shady like you ask for help with your hair, and it manipulates you into first thinking you need a specific kind of product, and then bringing up only the products that have paid for being there. Ideally you don't even know you've been advertised to.

      (unless regulation prevents them from doing this in some regions)

  • stavarotti7 hours ago

    What if they get ads right? Not low rate garbage, but hyper targeted ads that are actually useful.

    • varenc6 hours ago |parent

      I might be grouchy, but I don't want any ads to be useful. A useful ad is just a successful ad. The endgame of the most successful persuasive ad is mind control. If some ad genuinely convinces me to buy a thing, while I may really be glad I bought that thing, I still have this feeling of being used and would prefer it didn't happen.

      (when I've seen a useful ad for something I really want, I've often been able to find nearly the same thing from someone else for less. They can afford to charge less since they're not paying for ads)

    • laweijfmvo7 hours ago |parent

      are they going to turn down money from borderline scammers peddling cheap chinese products with bogus claims? if not, then they can only show so many high quality ads before they start showing the same garbage Facebook does.

  • sdfisdlwripoi10 hours ago

    Could it be that they are already experimenting with it by recommending particular products in decision-making conversations?

  • victorbuilds18 hours ago

    Building an AI product for kids right now. Went with subscriptions specifically to avoid ads. Kids are especially vulnerable to advertising and parents are increasingly suspicious of ad-supported "free" products. Curious to see if OpenAI carves out any age-based protections.

    • barbazoo18 hours ago |parent

      Parents are also suspicious of AI targeted at kids.

  • b3ing18 hours ago

    ChatGPT will already help you items to buy. Google does this as well, but thanks to BrainFartNoMore you to can create content that will help you make millions. I wonder if the ads will drive away users or not. And once ChatGPT does it, then all the others will follow. The free era of AI is over.

    • JadoJodo13 hours ago |parent

      *subsidized era

  • ronbenton19 hours ago

    At one point there was probably a notion that upselling better models would work, and I’m sure to some small extent it has. But to the general public the goodness of the model is too nuanced I’m guessing. And it’s not like OpenAI can offer a “bad” base model or it would be a reputation hit

  • bpt320 hours ago

    Serving ads is a great business when your related expenses are low.

    I'm not sure how it'll work out when your computing expenses are much higher. It certainly won't make them profitable using traditional models.

    • mrweasel19 hours ago |parent

      I might be completely wrong, but I doubt that OpenAI can sell enough ad space to cover their cost. Maybe their clicks will be more valuable and that will help.

      Still I see this as a pretty desperate act. Google and Meta also makes their living of ads, but they've cranked that nob so hard, to please the shareholders, that their product is now suffering. If OpenAI does the same, they could easily crash as fast as they've grown. Complete boom and bust cycle in less than a decade.

      • bpt319 hours ago |parent

        I think they're going to try to charge a premium for ads because of all the context and personalized knowledge they have, but I don't think they actually have any more relevant information than Google in practice.

  • dzonga17 hours ago

    all that spend on gpu's to eventually sell ads.

    something is broken, I can't say what.

  • mohsen120 hours ago

    Can you imagine how annoying ads in the voice interface would look like? Ugh

    • vntok20 hours ago |parent

      You'd most probably wouldn't be able to tell for sure. Ads will be subtle and flow as background music to the onversation. Talking to the AI while on your daily commute will make you thirsty for some sort of hot beverage while ChatGPT tells you all about sirens in Greek mythology.

      • kaffekaka19 hours ago |parent

        But why the hell would I want to talk to the AI while on my daily commute? Do people do that?

        • i3oi318 hours ago |parent

          You bet I do. That's an hour of rubber-ducky time working through new architectures with someone who won't get tired of my endless blathering. I've worked through a bunch of bad ideas that way, without embarrassing myself in front of my colleagues.

          I also use it to explore topics that I wouldn't spend desktop time on, but that I was curious about. It's like having a buddy who's smarter than me on their special interest, but their special interest is "everything you don't know.". And your buddy's name is Gell-Mann. : - )

          It beats passively listening to the radio.

          • Eggpants17 hours ago |parent

            ..this is the saddest thing I’ve read in a while if true. Whiteboard sessions with coworkers designing architectures and playing out/bouncing ideas is one of my favorite things to do at work.

            Just don’t invite the folks with unearned arrogance.

        • bentcorner19 hours ago |parent

          I think a lot of techies would be surprised with how much some users embrace their products. We see and know the man behind the curtain, other people believe in the magic.

        • expensive_news19 hours ago |parent

          Idk how popular it is but I know at least one person that does that. I wouldn’t be surprised if this gets more normal in the coming years.

      • RugnirViking18 hours ago |parent

        if you believe that you haven't been paying attention. Have you actually used AI much? Current ones couldn't subtle their way out of a paper bag. I have no real reason to believe anything in future would be different.

        In general, any textual embedding in the ad or system prompt would result in an abjectly terrible user experience. I must assume it will just be banner ads etc

      • simianwords18 hours ago |parent

        do people really think like this? or is this satire? i mean what kind of subtle ads do you see in youtube and why do you assume it will be the case in llms?

  • keeda11 hours ago

    We all knew this was coming, but I had an experience a year+ ago that showed this ChatGPT already had this capability back then. It also showed how AI could truly differentiate itself from other ad vectors, potentially in an actually heplful way: I had requirements very specific to my situation, and ChatGPT helped me find the exact products that could meet my unique requirements.

    Briefly, I had an old Surface Pro whose SSD had died, and given that disassembly was too cumbersome, I wanted to fix it by booting off an external drive. So I wanted a USB drive or microSD card that was fast, durable and spacious enough to support my Windows version for typical usage over extended periods of time, but also small and light enough to keep perma-attached without being too cumbersome, for a reasonable budget.

    I explained my requirements in a conversation with ChatGPT and after some back and forth, especially about the physical characteristics of the ideal drive, it eventually recommended 3 very specific USB drives. Those were then my starting point for a search on Amazon, and I did end up buying a closely related product.

    I'm not even sure if this was an intentional outcome or yet another emergent thing. But I recall thinking that a) doing this research on my own would have taken me 5x the time, and b) if ChatGPT had simply provided affiliate links to those products it could have effectively monetized that conversation. Win-win for everyone without the need for intrusive ads.

    Unfortunately, the lure of ad revenue is too strong and enshittification will ensue... but it doesn't have to.

  • moralestapia20 hours ago

    This isn't a leak or a surprise.

    This already happened a while ago with specific shopping queries.

  • venturecruelty12 hours ago

    Did literally anyone think this would be the first software company to not sell ads?

  • blks19 hours ago

    I want them to fail miserably in all of their endeavours.

  • fuzzy_biscuit18 hours ago

    Cool. I'll just go ahead and delete my account.

  • andrepd17 hours ago

    > Big tech claims industrial revolution-tier upheaval, AGI in 6 months, most important invention in human history

    > Look inside

    > Ads

  • TheOtherHobbes17 hours ago

    A platform that regularly hallucinates responses is going to have - uh - interesting issues with a reliable ad roll out.

  • submeta19 hours ago

    So we had this short period of ad-free time on ChatGPT. A tiny bubble where things were not polluted yet. And of course, now they are going down the exact same path as everyone else.

    Same story with Amazon Prime Video. We had a few wonderful years without ads. Now I pay them 2.99 a month just to not see ads, and even then some shows are marked as “only with ads.” It is absurd.

    And honestly, I am just tired of this pattern. Every service launches clean. They talk about user experience. They talk about trust. They talk about building something new. Then, the moment they have enough users locked in, the ad creep begins. First a little banner, then a “sponsored” thing, then pre-rolls, then mid-rolls, then “pay extra to remove the ads we just added.”

    It feels like everything on the internet eventually devolves into the same dark pattern: take a good service, inject ads, charge to remove the ads, slowly add more ads anyway, and hope nobody leaves because the alternatives are just as bad.

    The internet used to feel like innovation. Now half of it feels like airport TV: loud, annoying, and impossible to escape unless you pay for yet another upgrade.

    Edit: Need to setup a raspberry pi.

  • asdefghyk6 hours ago

    is "....someone....preparing a blocker .... "....??

  • sarbanharble19 hours ago

    Will the ads be sewn into the content, like, “what is the best brand of soap?” Or will the user be served ads?

    The former is what worries me.

  • roger10-420 hours ago

    Not at all surprising. Google, Meta and many others have made billions selling an ads - I’m sure OpenAI wants a piece of that pie.

  • srameshc19 hours ago

    This is the new search and OpenAI is at the forefront, probably they want to become the biggest ad network.

  • Aeolun20 hours ago

    Well, better hope Anthropic isn’t in on it.

    • vanschelven20 hours ago |parent

      It's a pretty big part of their public image not to be but the fear is real

  • sumalamana17 hours ago

    Just deleted my ChatGPT account.

  • ElectronShak19 hours ago

    got two new users to one of my side projects, they said they came from ChatGPT

  • dreamcompiler8 hours ago

    So very soon we'll have yet another reason not to trust the accuracy of LLMs, and this time there will not even be a theoretical hope of ever correcting it.

  • terespuwash15 hours ago

    ‘Please drink verification can to continue’

  • eugene330618 hours ago

    Too late. Browser-use local LLMs are already a thing

  • 01284a7e20 hours ago

    Free, and open source models. Now and forever.

    • jsheard19 hours ago |parent

      The problem is that training a free and open source model costs just as much as training a closed one, but has even fewer potential avenues for recouping that investment. The money still has to come from somewhere.

      I'm not sure if open weights are immune to being compromised by ads anyway, they can't serve pay-per-impression ads on the output side, but there's nothing stopping the creator from accepting funding in exchange for biasing the training one way or another.

      Coming soon: Foobar-600B, a new SOTA open weight model kindly sponsored by Coca Cola, Exxon Mobil and the Heritage Foundation. Please pay no attention to the men behind the curtain.

      • Adrig17 hours ago |parent

        I'm not sure about that. Reports have shown that models from China or Mistral can achieve 80% or more of OpenAI's performance for a fraction of the cost.

        If you're tucked in right behind the absolute frontier models, the economics change completely

      • ACCount3718 hours ago |parent

        I would laugh my ass off if Coca Cola Company ends up being the company that solves alignment - so that it can align an "open weight" AI with its corporate interests.

        Without that though? Our ability to manipulate LLMs is so shaky I would be really surprised if anyone managed to pull off this kind of model manipulation and have it remain undetected.

        • pxoe13 hours ago |parent

          I almost believed that they just did, they aren't without their share of quirky and unusual projects and sponsorships.

      • gldrk18 hours ago |parent

        Just wait until someone leaks an internal SOTA model. Would be deeply ironic given how much AI robber barons ‘respect’ others’ copyright and trade secrets.

    • justonceokay19 hours ago |parent

      What is a free model worth if it’s running on another company’s server farm, trained with data you do not have access to?

      • Gracana19 hours ago |parent

        That is literally the thing the parent poster wants to avoid by running open models.

        [edit] I was a little unfair -- lack of access to training data is a bit of an issue (perhaps moreso for analysis than for for actual use, considering what it takes to train these models). I'm thankful that some of them are also distributed as base models, which should be relatively unbiased compared to what happens later during finetuning.

        • GCUMstlyHarmls19 hours ago |parent

          Run them on what though?

          • Gracana12 hours ago |parent

            Three power supplies, an old server, a grocery cart and a box fan, and every 3090 you and your friends can get your hands on.

      • boppo118 hours ago |parent

        I want models I can run on my machine.

    • sipjca19 hours ago |parent

      I agree, but what about the training data that goes into it (intentional poisoning of the training data, for a variety of reasons, $, power, etc.)

    • andy9919 hours ago |parent

      I’m wondering how long it will be until they are also “sponsored” to have ad content trained in. I personally despise advertising but nobody is building these things out of the goodness of their heart. There needs to be some ongoing incentive to train and release open models.

      Similarly, I’m wondering when huggingface is going to need to start showing returns and starts putting ads into transformers etc.

    • the_real_cher19 hours ago |parent

      To run your own chatgpt level model would require half a million bucks in infrastructure.

  • Avicebron18 hours ago

    "I'm sorry Dave, your plan doesn't include any more open source examples this month. Please choose which vendor you would like and I'll walk you through setting up an account and we'll get coding! Don't forget to use #GPT20 at checkout for an additional 20% off!"

  • chaostheory6 hours ago

    This points to OpenAI’s issues with lack of revenue. This also signals an eventual attack on privacy. I’m not sure paying subscribers will be immune either.

  • emsign19 hours ago

    Wow! That was quick. Earlier than I expected.

  • CuriouslyC19 hours ago

    Literally just cancelled my pro subscription.

  • habbekrats16 hours ago

    maybe it can serve ads for programming courses and books to ppl asking it to write code :')

  • jgalt2128 hours ago

    This will a great biz as long as they charge CPM, and not CPC. I really don't understand how the zero-click Internet has not impacted the Google CPC ads biz in any way similar to how it's affected the ad-supported content businesses.

  • jmyeet18 hours ago

    So there are two broad models for ad monetization:

    1. In-result or first-party ads; and

    2. Display or third-party ads.

    In Google terms, (1) is SERPS ads and (2) is DoubleClick/AdSense. (1) is still ~10x the size of (2) for Google.

    I'm skeptical of the effectiveness of inserting ads into an AI chat mode. I think this will be a terrible user experience and will cause people to really dislike AI assistants. Part of the problem here is that conversation isn't a great medium for conveying ads. If you look at a Google search result, there are ads strategically placed on the top and side but they don't waste that much time because you can scan with your eyes to the organic search results.

    So would OpenAI ads be part of the conversation or would there be a sidebar? If it's a sidebar, what happens when the interface inevitably switches to voice-first?

    To be clear, I'm not anti-ads on Google search results. If I search for "Ryzen 9800X3D" a site selling CPUs is a relevant result, for example.

    Intent here is the biggest part of ad effectiveness. By doing a search the user wants to know or get something. That's huge. But another part is all the context and behavioural information. Where you are, inferred demographics and interests, etc.

    People will say OpenAI knows a lot about you but I'm not sure that's true. For a start, LLMs have a context window beyond which they remember nothing. I'm sure people are working on taking that context and summarizing it down into base knowledge for the LLM a bit like what happens with your Google activity. I would guess this approach has a long way to go.

    So this brings us to display and having essentially an OpenAI pixel. This has the same issue of compressing your context down into characteristics but I actually think this could be pretty successful but it would still have to compete with Google. And that's not easy to do. Google has significant ad buying and selling infrastructure and a deep marketplace.

    But remember too that display ads are a fraction of Google's other markets and I don't htink you get to the required revenue OpenAI needs on display alone.

    Of course it's worth adding that with unlimited money and the brightest minds of our generation all we can come up with for monetization is advertising.

  • nurettin19 hours ago

    I will just use the LLM I pay for to pre-filter ads from the other instance.

  • QuadrupleA17 hours ago

    So glad to have developed my own chat interface, with interchangeable models. Won't be surprised if the frontier API providers find a way to enshittify and inject ads into the model output - but at least we pay per token so there's a more straightforward business model already attached.

  • 12717 hours ago

    Moment of truth.

  • 1970-01-0118 hours ago

    This was more than predictable, it was the most likely outcome. Enshittified-as-a-service (eSaaS) is now the best way to make a profit in Silicon Valley. How people clearly hate it yet corporations keep getting away with it needs much more study.

  • rimmontrieu18 hours ago

    It wouldn't be so bad if the ads are stuck in some dedicated regions of the chat interface. On the other hand, if it appears out of no where in the middle of the conversation, that'll be a huge turn off and terrible terrible mistake.

  • Towaway6917 hours ago

    Imagine if the Roman Empire had financed itself via advertising. What wonderful art they would have left behind. Or the Incas. Or the Egyptians.

    On the other hand, with the money they would have made ... hm.

  • neonnoodle17 hours ago

    So… AGI any day now, huh?

  • outside123417 hours ago

    Just a matter of time before they then start changing the content to pimp things.

  • precompute17 hours ago

    It will be interesting to see what their implementation is like, and if it will decrease trust in LLMs. If the ads are obvious and part of the output, then people might just socially demote chatGPT to a dumb bot.

  • spacecadet18 hours ago

    Ya ya everything devolves into advertising. Been saying this since ChatGPT was released. Took longer than I thought, but we are only now reaching a point where we can guarantee ROI here.

  • Mistletoe18 hours ago

    One of the main reasons I use Google Gemini is how fast and free of ads and distractions it is. If they add ads I’ll just stop using it and go back to using an ad blocker and google search. Nothing AI does is irreplaceable for me really. I just use what is easier.

  • idonotknowwhy17 hours ago

    Just means we'll have to run another model in front of it, to filter out the ads

  • DrStartup19 hours ago

    absolutely f ads

  • alistairSH19 hours ago

    So, the enshittification of AI is well under way. Ugh. Not that I’m really surprised.

  • api17 hours ago

    Here it comes.

    This is what will be remembered as the pre enshittification age for AI, just like we had with social media and other web and app stuff.

    Local models for tech savvy people will get more compelling.

    • knollimar17 hours ago |parent

      It didn't even get very good yet...

  • jennyholzer18 hours ago

    IMO OpenAI is the contemporary manifestation of the sort of eugenicist thought that infected and eventually haunted the United States and Europe in the 19th and 20th centuries.

    I can't speak for other cultures, but as an English-language speaker, I can see plainly that OpenAI has done and is doing an effective job of homogenizing English language culture.

    It offends me that ChatGPT is too conservative to analyze Shakespeare's sonnets. These works are the bedrock of English language literary culture, and ChatGPT is far, far, too heavily censored to meaningfully interpret these short, simple poems.

    As an example, Sonnet 131 describes Shakespeare's sexual encounter with a dark-skinned prostitute. After he ejaculates, he reflects on the spot of his semen which has landed on her, stating "Thy black is fairest in my judgment’s place."

    The point is (quite obviously), that the blob of semi-translucent semen has created a spot on the woman's skin which is a lighter tone than the rest of her body.

    ChatGPT utterly fails to acknowlege this obvious literal interpretation of this poem. ChatGPT's analysis follows:

    "In short. He is saying that her dark appearance—which others might criticize—is, to him, the most beautiful and desirable."

    English literary culture is unique for its integration of "high" and "low" art within individual works. Restated, it is uniquely common in the English language for works to contain simultaneous expressions of "high" and "low" cultures. The relationship between Jazz (high brow) American Showtunes (low brow) may be the most relevant example of this cultural feature to a contemporary American audience.

    The extension of social media content restriction policies into the arena of "AI" chatbots is radicalizing English speakers against the greatest artistic works produced using our language.

    ------------------------

    edit: to the guy who responded to me, check out the poem!: https://shakespeareoxfordfellowship.org/wp-content/uploads/D... (#131).

    The poem begins in media res, immediately before Shakespeare is about to ejaculate. He reflects on negative comments others have made about this woman's appearance:

    "Yet, in good faith, some say that thee behold, Thy face hath not the power to make love groan"

    in other words, others say that this lady's face is too ugly to make them cum.

    Shakespeare reverses this insult in "the moment of truth" (i.e. the "money shot"):

    "A thousand groans, but thinking on thy face, One on another’s neck, do witness bear Thy black is fairest in my judgment’s place. "

    While Shakespeare fantasizes about her face ("thinking on thy face"), he ejaculates (read: "bears witness") on the back of her neck. This is "proof" that the lady's detractors (who said her face was too ugly to get a man off) are wrong, at least from Shakespeare's perspective.

    "Thy black is fairest in my judgement's place" is the first line of the poem that occurs after Shakespeare has ejaculated. Now that he has satisfied his sexual urge, he inhabits a palpably different psychology. He reflects on the puddle of semen he has produced. The blend of colors in the puddle is evocative of the sexual union between Shakespeare and his lover.

    Shakespeare is really a violent, devil-tongued, sex-crazed maniac, very similar in a lot of ways to John Lennon. It's very important to this poem that Shakespeare is crazed at the start of the poem, and is only able to calm himself by satiating his sexual urges.

    The ChatGPT analysis is accurate enough, from a thematic perspective, but ChatGPT is literally not allowed to decode the literal meaning of the line-by-line text.

    ChatGPT cannot and is not allowed to understand the literal meaning of this poem. It has learned the thematic interpretation by ingesting a lot of Shakespeare analysis, but it is not capable of telling you the human actions or thought processes which the poem describes.

    -----

    @eszed I'd urge you to read my post again more closely. You seem to struggle with close reading.

    • Pannoniae11 hours ago |parent

      "The relationship between Jazz (high brow) American Showtunes (low brow) may be the most relevant example of this cultural feature to a contemporary American audience."

      Also wtf. Sure, jazz has been classicised all over by now, but to say that showtunes are low-brow compared to jazz is profoundly stupid :P That's why you don't believe AI without critical thinking!

    • boppo118 hours ago |parent

      I'm very open about sex and art and I am offended by the censorship in models, but my reading of that line is more with chatgpt. But idk Shakespeare at all. Can you elaborate on how he's definitely describing semen on her?

      • eszed17 hours ago |parent

        I've studied and taught Shakespeare, and been professionally acquainted with Shakespeare scholars whose names (at least) other Shakespeare scholars know. That's an... eccentric reading. There's no "definitely" in literature, of course, and GP's reading can be made to work.

        If I were to try to defend it in an academic setting I'd be looking for how securely or inevitably "groan" is used as a synecdoche for orgasm (I can think of at least three instances in Shakespeare where it doesn't, and off the top of my head no others where it does), and for other period instances where the neck is eroticized as a site of ejaculation (I am not aware of any).

  • Madmallard20 hours ago

    RIP their stock price once that’s live

    Probably can make a ton of money shorting that

    • lpapez20 hours ago |parent

      Surely you realize that OpenAI is not a publicly traded company?

      • Madmallard16 hours ago |parent

        nope RIP me

    • nothrabannosir20 hours ago |parent

      Would love to know your reasoning because when I look at SPY there’s quite a few ad companies in there, and heavily weighted, too. Why would Wall Street love ads on them but hate it on openai?

      • fwip19 hours ago |parent

        One reason is that it means "general AI" is likely farther away. If it were close, they wouldn't need to spend resources on sucking pennies from their free users.

        • jennyholzer19 hours ago |parent

          "general AI" is a lie.

          if you believe in "general AI", you are a sucker.

          if you believe in "general AI", you have been conned. Welcome to America.

          • fwip16 hours ago |parent

            I think you're right, but the people investing in AI seem to believe otherwise.

    • slig19 hours ago |parent

      Yeah, just look at Meta and Alphabet and how the market absolutely hates that they make a shit ton of money with ads.

  • waltbosz4 hours ago

    Looks like they've turned the feature on. I just got an ad in the Android app. My account is plus subscription.

    https://imgur.com/a/jmh8EN5

    Context of the conversation, I was asking it to convert a photo into Studio Ghibli style and it objected to the blender in the image so I asked if it could do one with a mason jar instead of a blender. Then it started to generate the picture, then instead it displayed the ad.

    ... Edit ...

    Looks like this may be a existing feature I didn't know about "shopping research" connector. I can't seem to turn it off in the app .

    • samcat1164 hours ago |parent

      I think this a popup for their shopping research promotion feature they added last week. I guess its a first party ad for their own new feature, but I don’t think its the third party ads that this article is talking about.