I fully agree. I tried using ChatGPT for some coaching, but tried to keep it high level and in areas where I wouldn’t be too bothers if it showed up on the internet.
Starting today, OpenAI says that it won’t use any data submitted through its API for “service improvements,” including AI model training, unless a customer or organization opts in. In addition, the company is implementing a 30-day data retention policy for API users with options for stricter retention “depending on user needs,” and simplifying its terms and data ownership to make it clear that users own the input and output of the models.
I was actually thinking that having an Obsidian plugin for this sort of thing would be really neat.
There are a few Obsidian plugins that do similar stuff using LLMs, (they purport to read your notes and help you something something).
I’m thinking of mocking something up over the next week or so that does this ‘diary questions’ thing in a more interactive way, via the API, from inside Obsidian.
I fully agree. I tried using ChatGPT for some coaching, but tried to keep it high level and in areas where I wouldn’t be too bothers if it showed up on the internet.
I think using the API, rather than ChatGPT, is better. See e.g. https://techcrunch.com/2023/03/01/addressing-criticism-openai-will-no-longer-use-customer-data-to-train-its-models-by-default/:
I was actually thinking that having an Obsidian plugin for this sort of thing would be really neat.
There are a few Obsidian plugins that do similar stuff using LLMs, (they purport to read your notes and help you something something).
I’m thinking of mocking something up over the next week or so that does this ‘diary questions’ thing in a more interactive way, via the API, from inside Obsidian.