Tag: chat

  • OpenAI to let users turn-off chat history in ChatGPT

    OpenAI to let users turn-off chat history in ChatGPT

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    San Francisco: Microsoft-owned OpenAI has announced a new update that allows users to turn-off their chat history in its AI chatbot ChatGPT.

    OpenAI said, it will not save users’ earlier conversations when the chat history option is disabled and will not use those conversations to train and improve its models.

    “We’ve introduced the ability to turn off chat history in ChatGPT. Conversations that are started when chat history is disabled won’t be used to train and improve our models, and won’t appear in the history sidebar,” OpenAI said in a blogpost on Tuesday.

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    The new disable chat history option is now rolling out to all users which can be found in ChatGPT’s settings and can be changed at any time.

    Moreover, the company said that “when chat history is disabled, we will retain new conversations for 30 days and review them only when needed to monitor for abuse, before permanently deleting them.”

    OpenAI is also working on a new ChatGPT Business subscription for professionals who need more control over their data as well as enterprises seeking to manage their end users.

    According to the company, ChatGPT Business will follow their API’s (Application Programming Interface) data usage policies, which means that end users’ data won’t be used to train their models by default.

    The company plan to make ChatGPT Business available in the coming months.

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    #OpenAI #users #turnoff #chat #history #ChatGPT

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Telegram launches shareable chat folders, custom wallpapers

    Telegram launches shareable chat folders, custom wallpapers

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    San Francisco: Telegram Messenger has launched major upgrades for its application with features like shareable chat folders, custom wallpapers, and more.

    According to the company, the new update will let users share entire chat folders with one link, create custom wallpapers for individual chats, use web apps in any chat and more.

    Now, chat folders can be shared with a link, inviting friends and colleagues to dozens of work groups, news channel collections, and more.

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    With one tap, users will be able to add the folder and instantly join all its chats.

    “You can include any public chats, as well as any chats where you have the admin rights to add people,” Telegram said in a blogpost.

    Now, your favourite photos and colour combinations can become ‘custom wallpapers’ in specific chats to give conversations extra personality and make them stand out.

    You can set a custom wallpaper in any 1-on-1 chat.

    To change the wallpaper, go to the chat header and click ‘Set Wallpaper’ on Android, or open a profile and tap ‘Change Wallpaper’ on iOS.

    Moreover, Telegram is also working on ‘better bots’.

    The latest update includes the integration of seamless web apps that can be launched within any chat.

    These bots are not only accessible through private or group chats but can also be used collaboratively.

    “Web apps of bots that support this feature can be accessed via a direct link or by mentioning the bot’s username in any chat on Telegram,” the company said.

    Among other features, the company introduced bot links and Telegram Premium on Fragment, faster scrolling for attachments, read times in topics, and improved interfaces.

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    #Telegram #launches #shareable #chat #folders #custom #wallpapers

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Android beta users to have ‘lock chat’ feature on WhatsApp

    Android beta users to have ‘lock chat’ feature on WhatsApp

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    San Francisco: Meta-owned messaging platform WhatsApp is reportedly working on a new “Lock chat” feature for Android beta which will allow users to lock chats and keep them hidden.

    This new feature will improve the users’ privacy as it will help users to lock their most private chats within the chat’s contact or group info, reports WABetaInfo.

    When a chat is locked, it can only be accessed using the user’s fingerprint or passcode, making it almost impossible for anyone else to open the chat.

    Also, if someone attempts to access the user’s phone and fails to provide the needed authentication, they will be asked to clear the chat to open it.

    This feature also helps to keep media private by making sure that photos and videos sent in a locked chat are not automatically saved to the device’s gallery.

    The ability to lock chats is currently under development and is expected to be released in a future update of the application, the report said.

    Meanwhile, on Friday, it was reported that the messaging platform was rolling out a new text editor experience to some beta testers on Android beta.

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    #Android #beta #users #lock #chat #feature #WhatsApp

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • WhatsApp launches official chat on iOS, Android

    WhatsApp launches official chat on iOS, Android

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    New Delhi: Meta-owned WhatsApp has launched its official chat on the platform where users can receive the latest information about the app, including updates and tips on how to use it on iOS and Android.

    According to WABetaInfo, the chat comes marked with a green badge, and also includes tips and tricks on how to use the app, as well as information on new features and updates.

    Verified badges ensure that the chat is legitimate, helping to prevent users from falling victim to scams or phishing attempts that imitate the official WhatsApp account.

    Moreover, the report stated that the benefit of receiving these messages in the official chat is that users can easily stay notified without having to search for the latest information themselves.

    Users can also receive updates directly from WhatsApp, and if they do not want to receive notifications, they can always archive, mute, or block the chat.

    The report further mentioned that the first message sent by WhatsApp in the official chat explains how to make messages disappear and links to an official FAQ.

    Disappearing messages is a feature that allows users to send messages that disappear from both the sender and receiver’s chat after a certain period of time.

    The new WhatsApp official chat is currently available to some random users, and it is unclear how people are selected since it seems to be a random selection, the report said.

    Meanwhile, Meta has introduced a new WhatsApp app for Windows that loads faster and features an interface similar to the mobile version of the app.

    Users can now host group video calls with up to eight people and audio calls with up to 32 people.

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    #WhatsApp #launches #official #chat #iOS #Android

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • SRK’s fun chat with his ‘first heroine’ Renuka Shahane wins hearts

    SRK’s fun chat with his ‘first heroine’ Renuka Shahane wins hearts

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    Mumbai: Shah Rukh Khan knows best how to make his Twitter feed interesting.

    On Saturday, actress Renuka Shahane and her husband Ashutosh Rana went together to watch ‘Pathaan’. Pathaan features Ashutosh in a key role.

    “Finally going to watch #Pathaan Mausam bilkul sahi hai kursi ki peti baandh li hai with Col Luthra ji,” Renuka captioned the post.

    Soon after she shared the post, SRK took notice of it and reacted to it with a special tweet. While replying to Renuka, the superstar revealed that she was his ‘first heroine’. The duo worked together in the 1989 TV series, ‘Circus’.

    “Col Luthraji ko bataya aapne ki aap meri pehli heroine hain!! Or should we keep it a Top Secret otherwise he may fire me from the agency,” SRK quipped.

    Responding to SRK, Renuka wrote, “Hahaha unsey koi baat chhupti kahaan hai? Aaphi ne unhe antaryaami kahaa hai aur chaahey jo ho jaaye, woh aapko fire nahi kar saktey kyunki jo kaam aap kartey hain woah koi aur nahi kar saktaa.”

    In Pathaan, Shah Rukh essays the role of a RAW agent while Ashutosh is seen as RAW joint secretary, Colonel Luthra

    Last month, SRK conducted an #AskSRK session where he praised Ashutosh Rana. When a netizen asked SRK to say something about Ashutosh, he replied, “He is a Gyaani (intellectual) and Antaryaami (one who knows from within) apart from being a very very fine actor.”

    To that, Renuka responded, “You are unfailingly kind and generous and truthful,” along with smileys and hands joined together emoji.

    Meanwhile, Pathaan has become the first Hindi film to breach Rs 400 crore nett in India. Helmed by Siddharth Anand, ‘Pathaan’ also stars John Abraham and Deepika Padukone in the lead roles. Apart from “seeti maar” dialogues and high-octane action scenes, it’s Salman Khan’s extended cameo as Tiger that has made the film more special.

    It is the fourth instalment in the YRF Spy Universe and is SRK’s comeback film after ‘Zero’ (2018).



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    #SRKs #fun #chat #heroine #Renuka #Shahane #wins #hearts

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Sadhu commits suicide in Gujarat after sex chat, audio/video clips get leaked

    Sadhu commits suicide in Gujarat after sex chat, audio/video clips get leaked

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    Junagadh: A sadhu, Ramkrushnanand alias Rajbharti, committed suicide here on Tuesday. He took the extreme step as since the last few days, a letter exposing him and his activities and his audio/video clips were in circulation on social media.

    Junagadh taluka police station sources said that Rajbharti committed suicide at his farm in Khadia village by shooting himself with his licensed weapon. The police have registered a case and have begun an investigation.

    Sources said that since the last few days a letter was in circulation in Junagadh, alleging that the sadhu is a Muslim and his real name is Hujefa. He has sold the property of Ram bapu, who always believed in social service, whereas Rajbharti believed in business, he has started a real estate business and is having physical relations with many women.

    Video clips in circulation show the sadhu drinking liquor, his sex chats and conversations with women are also in circulation. A photograph of him hugging a woman too is in circulation.

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    #Sadhu #commits #suicide #Gujarat #sex #chat #audiovideo #clips #leaked

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • ‘They’re 25, they don’t do emails’: is instant chat replacing the inbox?

    ‘They’re 25, they don’t do emails’: is instant chat replacing the inbox?

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    Could office emails go the way of the fax machine and the rolodex? They have not joined those workplace dinosaurs yet, but there were signs of evolutionary change at the annual gathering of business leaders in Davos this week, where tech bosses said emails were becoming outdated.

    The chief executive of the IT firm Wipro, which employs 260,000 people worldwide, said about 10% of his staff “don’t even check one email per month” and that he used Instagram and LinkedIn to talk to staff.

    “They’re 25, they don’t care. They don’t go on their emails, they go on Snapchat, they go on all these things,” said Thierry Delaporte. Anjali Sud, the chief executive of video platform Vimeo, said at the summit emails were “outdated”.

    Delaporte’s comments, reported by the Daily Telegraph, referred to Gen Z professionals – typically people born after 1997 – but according to one UK business owner, it cuts across all generations.

    “If I want something done quickly, I rarely rely on email myself,” says Farhad Divecha, owner and managing director of London-based digital marketing agency Accuracast. “I tend to send a [Microsoft] Teams message, or even WhatsApp if it’s really urgent. I might send an email with details, but over the past three to five years I’ve learned that email’s just not good enough if you want something done quickly.”

    He adds that some clients with Gen Z employees preferred to bypass email, using alternatives such as the messaging service Slack. “It’s not uncommon to have clients with more Gen Z employees tell us: ‘let’s take the discussion on Slack because we tend not to use email much’,” he says.

    Email has many rivals that offer messaging services. Instagram is used by more than 2 billion people a month, LinkedIn has 875 million members, Snapchat has more than 360 million daily users and 2 billion people are on WhatsApp. Microsoft’s Teams platform is also popular, with more than 270 million users.

    But email is not going away and its use continues to grow. The total number of business and consumer emails sent and received each day will exceed 333bn in 2022, says the tech research firm Radicati, which represents a 4% increase on the previous year – and will grow to more than 390bn by 2026. More than half the world’s population, 4.2 billion, uses email, according to Radicati.

    “We don’t feel email is dying,” says the research firm’s CEO, Sara Radicati. One major source of growth in email use comes from the consumer sphere, such as emails related to online purchases. Also, an email account is needed for all sorts of online activity, such as setting up social media accounts and buying goods.

    Radicati acknowledges, nonetheless, that in the world of work, social media and instant messaging are playing a role alongside email. “Email tends to be used for official communications, while more interpersonal, casual communication is finding its way through social media and instant messaging”, she says.

    Professionals who spoke to the Guardian described a mixed approach to email use. Jordan, 28, a project manager in the construction industry from Bristol, says there was a split between formal and informal communications at work: “I use emails purely to talk about formal things that need to be written down. That’s in terms of agreements or anything like that. But for anything that is remotely informal, I move straight over on to Teams.”

    Tracy, 29, a scientific researcher from London, says she often checks her personal email “for keeping track of things like theatre tickets or other purchases”. At work, she has a separate email address “which I draft out and use very formally” but also uses instant messaging on Teams for quick checkups with colleagues. She adds that she “never” uses text or social media to contact colleagues in the workplace.

    Gen Z workers who contacted the Guardian also said they used work emails regularly. “I generally check personal emails once a day and work emails regularly between 9 and 6,” says Matthew, 23, a human rights paralegal based in London. Meanwhile, Owen, 25, a programmer from Aberdeen, says: “Like any professional environment, my workplace uses email. Were I asked to check something like Instagram at work, I would expect some kind of wrongdoing was taking place.”

    For one expert, the Davos comments reflect a constant of professional life: relentless technological and cultural change. Emails were frowned upon by the “telephone and letter” generation, says Thomas Robinson, senior lecturer at Bayes Business School in London. But a shift happened anyway.

    “We can partner up with younger generations and add our experience to that, partner up with that community, or we can make enemies of the future. But thinking you can hold back techno-cultural change is for the birds,” he says.

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    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )