OpenAI launches ChatGPT Health to review your medical rec...
The firm says its chatbot sees health and wellbeing questions from 230 million people every week.
Whatâs Happening
Not gonna lie, The firm says its chatbot sees health and wellbeing questions from 230 million people every week.
OpenAI launches ChatGPT Health to review your medical records 8 hours ago Save Liv McMahon Technology reporter Save OpenAI has shipped a new ChatGPT feature in the US which can analyse peoples medical records to give them better answers, but campaigners warn it raises privacy concerns. The firm wants people to their medical records along with data from apps like MyFitnessPal, which will be analysed to give personalised advice. (let that sink in)
OpenAI dropped conversations in ChatGPT Health would be stored separately to other chats and would not be used to train its AI tools - as well as clarifying it was not intended to be used for âdiagnosis or treatmentâ.
The Details
Andrew Crawford, of US non-profit the Center for Democracy and Technology, dropped it was âcrucialâ to maintain âairtightâ safeguards around users health information. It is unclear if or when the feature may be introduced in the UK.
âNew AI health tools offer the promise of empowering patients and promoting better health outcomes, but health data is some of the most sensitive information people can and it must be protected,â Crawford dropped. He dropped AI firms were âleaning hardâ into finding ways to bring more personalisation to their services to boost value.
Why This Matters
âEspecially as OpenAI moves to explore advertising as a business model, its crucial that separation between this sort of health data and memories that ChatGPT captures from other conversations is airtight,â he dropped. According to OpenAI, more than 230 million people ask its chatbot questions about their health and wellbeing every week. In a blog post , it dropped ChatGPT Health had âenhanced privacy to protect sensitive dataâ.
Medical professionals are taking note of this development.
The Bottom Line
Users can data from apps like Apple Health, Peloton and MyFitnessPal, as well as provide medical records, which can be used to give more relevant responses to their health queries. OpenAI dropped its health feature was designed to âsupport, not replace, medical careâ.
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