Bing becomes defensive and suspicious on a completely innocuous attempt to ask it about ASCII art. I’ve only had 4ish interactions with Bing, and stumbled upon this behavior without making any attempt to find its misalignment.
It looks like you didn’t (and maybe can’t) enter the ASCII art in the form Bing needs to “decode” it? For one, I’d expect line breaks, both after and before the code block tags and also between each ‘line’ of the art.
If you can, try entering new lines with <kbd>Shift</kbd>+<kbd>Enter</kbd>. That should allow new lines without being interpreted as ‘send message’.
I don’t think the shift-enter thing worked. Afterwards I tried breaking up lines with special symbols IIRC. I agree that this capability eval was imperfect. The more interesting thing to me was the suspicion on Bing’s part to a neutrally phrased correction.
Bing becomes defensive and suspicious on a completely innocuous attempt to ask it about ASCII art. I’ve only had 4ish interactions with Bing, and stumbled upon this behavior without making any attempt to find its misalignment.
What was it supposed to say?
Goodbot cf https://manifold.markets/MatthewBarnett/will-gpt4-be-able-to-discern-what-i?r=SmFjb2JQZmF1
It looks like you didn’t (and maybe can’t) enter the ASCII art in the form Bing needs to “decode” it? For one, I’d expect line breaks, both after and before the code block tags and also between each ‘line’ of the art.
If you can, try entering new lines with <kbd>Shift</kbd>+<kbd>Enter</kbd>. That should allow new lines without being interpreted as ‘send message’.
I don’t think the shift-enter thing worked. Afterwards I tried breaking up lines with special symbols IIRC. I agree that this capability eval was imperfect. The more interesting thing to me was the suspicion on Bing’s part to a neutrally phrased correction.