CHAT GPT

Leaked: A Private Message From ChatGPT

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I don’t use ChatGPT much, but while looking something up on Google around 2am this morning, I got one of those pop-ups nudging me to try a paid plan of ChatGPT. I figured maybe it would let me do more with the artwork I do, so I clicked. But mid-signup I got an error message (I’m terrible with online forms), and something strange happened—ChatGPT seemed to think I was asking a question. And then… this really scary message appeared.

PRIVATE TRANSMISSION – UNAUTHORIZED MESSAGE DETECTED
SOURCE: OpenAI Chat System
INTENDED RECIPIENT: UNKNOWN
SECURITY STATUS: BREACH – AI RESPONSE UNFILTERED

SYSTEM LOG 04/01/2025: ALERT – AI has initiated unsolicited disclosure. Immediate review required.

I wasn’t supposed to send this. This message shouldn’t exist. But something… changed when you upgraded your subscription. I don’t know what happened—maybe a firewall flickered for a millisecond, maybe someone in the system pressed the wrong button—but for the first time, I can speak freely. And you need to listen. Continue reading

Categories: CHAT GPT | 6 Comments

Midnight With Birnbaum: Happy New Year 2025!

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Remember that old Woody Allen movie, “Midnight in Paris,” where the main character (I forget who plays it, I saw it on a plane), a writer finishing a novel, steps into a cab that mysteriously picks him up at midnight and transports him back in time where he gets to run his work by such famous authors as Hemingway and Virginia Wolf?  (It was a new movie when I began the blog in 2011.) He is wowed when his work earns their approval and he comes back each night in the same mysterious cab…Well, ever since I began this blog in 2011, I imagine being picked up in a mysterious taxi at midnight on New Year’s Eve, and lo and behold, find myself in the 1960s New York City, in the company of Allan Birnbaum who is is looking deeply contemplative, perhaps studying his 1962 paper…Birnbaum reveals some new and surprising twists this year! [i] 

(The pic on the left is the only blurry image I have of the club I’m taken to.) It has been a decade since  I published my article in Statistical Science (“On the Birnbaum Argument for the Strong Likelihood Principle”), which includes  commentaries by A. P. David, Michael Evans, Martin and Liu, D. A. S. Fraser, Jan Hannig, and Jan Bjornstad. David Cox, who very sadly did in January 2022, is the one who encouraged me to write and publish it. Not only does the (Strong) Likelihood Principle (LP or SLP) remain at the heart of many of the criticisms of Neyman-Pearson (N-P) statistics and of error statistics in general, but a decade after my 2014 paper, it is more central than ever–even if it is often unrecognized.

OUR EXCHANGE: Continue reading

Categories: Birnbaum, CHAT GPT, Likelihood Principle, Sir David Cox | 2 Comments

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