As winter descended on San Francisco in late 2022, OpenAI quietly pushed a new service dubbed ChatGPT live with a blog post and a single tweet from CEO Sam Altman. The team labeled it a “low-key research preview” — they had good reason to set expectations low.
Technology
Inside the launch — and future — of ChatGPT
“It couldn’t even do arithmetic,” Liam Fedus, OpenAI’s head of post-training says. It was also prone to hallucinating or making things up, adds Christina Kim, a researcher on the mid-training team.
Ultimately, ChatGPT would become anything but low-key.
While the OpenAI researchers slept, users in Japan flooded ChatGPT’s servers, crashing the site only hours after launch. That was just the beginning.
“The dashboards at that time were just always red,” recalls Kim. The launch coincided with NeurIPS, the world’s premier AI conference, and soon ChatGPT was the only thing anyone there could talk about. ChatGPT’s error page — “ChatGPT is at capacity right now” — would become a familiar sight.
“We had the initial launch meeting in this small room, and it wasn’t like the world just lit on fire all of a sudden,” Fedus says during a recent interview from OpenAI’s headquarters. “We’re like, ‘Okay, cool. I guess it’s out there now.’ But it was the next day when we realized — oh, wait, this is big.”
“The dashboards at that time were just always red.”
Two years later, ChatGPT still hasn’t cracked advanced arithmetic or become factually reliable. It hasn’t mattered. The chatbot has evolved from a prototype to a $4 billion revenue engine with 300 million weekly active users. It has shaken the foundations of the tech industry, even as OpenAI loses money (and cofounders) hand over fist while competitors like Anthropic threaten its lead.
Whether used as praise or pejorative, “ChatGPT” has become almost synonymous with generative AI. Over a series of recent video calls, I sat down with Fedus, Kim, ChatGPT head of product Nick Turley, and ChatGPT engineering lead Sulman Choudhry to talk about ChatGPT’s origins and where it’s going next.
A “weird” name and a scrappy start
ChatGPT was effectively born in December 2021 with an OpenAI project dubbed WebGPT: an AI tool that could search the internet and write answers. The team took inspiration from WebGPT’s conversational interface and began plugging a similar interface into GPT-3.5, a successor to the GPT-3 text model released in 2020. They gave it the clunky name “Chat with GPT-3.5” until, in what Turley recalls as a split-second decision, they simplified it to ChatGPT.
The name could have been the even more straightforward “Chat,” and in retrospect, he thinks perhaps it should have been. “The entire world got used to this odd, weird name, we’re probably stuck with it. But obviously, knowing what I know now, I wish we picked a slightly easier to pronounce name,” he says. (It was recently revealed that OpenAI purchased the domain chat.com for more than $10 million of cash and stock in mid-2023.)
As the team discovered the model’s obvious limitations, they debated whether to narrow its focus by launching a tool for help with meetings, writing, or coding. But OpenAI cofounder John Schulman (who has since left for Anthropic) advocated for keeping the focus broad.
The team describes it as a risky bet at the time; chatbots were viewed as an unremarkable backwater of machine learning, they thought, with no successful precedents. Adding to their concerns, Facebook’s Galactica AI bot had just spectacularly flamed out and been pulled offline after generating false research.
The team grappled with timing. GPT-4 was already in development with advanced features like Code Interpreter and web browsing, so it would make sense to wait to release ChatGPT atop the more capable model. Kim and Fedus also recall people wanting to wait and launch something more polished, especially after seeing other companies’ undercooked bots fail.
Despite early concerns about chatbots being a dead end, The New York Times has reported that other team members worried competitors would beat OpenAI to market with a fresh wave of bots. The deciding vote was Schulman, Fedus and Kim say. He pushed for an early release, alongside Altman, both believing it was important to get AI into peoples’ hands quickly.
OpenAI had demoed a chatbot at Microsoft Build earlier that year and generated virtually no buzz. On top of that, many of ChatGPT’s early users didn’t seem to be actually using it that much. The team shared their prototype with about 50 friends and family members. Turley “personally emailed every single one of them” every day to check in. While Fedus couldn’t recall exact figures, he recalls that about 10 percent of that early test group used it every day.
Image: Cath Virginia / The Verge, Getty Images
Later, the team would see this as an indication they’d created something with potential staying power.
“We had two friends who basically were on it from the start of their work day — and they were founders,” Kim recalls. “They were on it basically for 12 to 16 hours a day, just talking to it all day.” With just two weeks before the end of November, Schulman made the final call: OpenAI would launch ChatGPT on the last day of that month.
The team canceled their Thanksgiving plans and began a two-week sprint to public release. Much of the system was built at this point, Kim says, but its security vulnerabilities were untested. So they focused heavily on red teaming, or stress testing the system for potential safety problems.
“If I had known it was going to be a big deal, I would certainly not want to ship it right before a winter holiday week before we were all going to go home,” Turley says. “I remember working very hard, but I also remember thinking, ‘Okay, let’s get this thing out, and then we’ll come back after the holiday to look at the learnings, to see what people want out of an AI assistant.’”
In an internal Slack poll, OpenAI employees guessed how many users they would get. Most predictions ranged from a mere 10,000 to 50,000. When someone suggested it might reach a million users, others jumped in to say that was wildly optimistic.
On launch day, they realized they’d all been incredibly wrong.
After Japan crashed their servers, and red dashboards and error messages abounded, the team was anxiously picking up the pieces and refreshing Twitter to gauge public reaction, Kim says. They believed the reaction to ChatGPT could only go one of two ways: total indifference or active contempt. They worried people might discover problematic ways to use it (like attempting to jailbreak it), and the uncertainty of how the public would receive their creation kept them in a state of nervous anticipation.
The launch was met with mixed emotions. ChatGPT quickly started facing criticism over accuracy issues and bias. Many schools ran to immediately ban it over cheating concerns. Some users on Reddit likened it to the early days of Google (and were shocked it was free). For its part, Google dubbed the chatbot a “code red” threat.
OpenAI would wind up surpassing its most ambitious 1-million-user target within five days of launch. Two months after its debut, ChatGPT garnered more than 30 million users.
When someone suggested it might reach a million users, others jumped in to say that was wildly optimistic.
Within weeks of ChatGPT’s November 30th launch, the team started rolling out updates incorporating user feedback (like its tendency to give overly verbose answers). The initial chaos had settled, user numbers were still climbing, and the team had a sobering realization: if they wanted to keep this momentum, things would have to change. The small group that launched a “low-key research preview” — a term that would become a running joke at OpenAI — would need to get a lot bigger.
Over the coming months and years, ChatGPT’s team would grow enormously and shift priorities — sometimes to the chagrin of many early staffers. Top researcher Jan Leike, who played a crucial role in refining ChatGPT’s conversational abilities and ensuring its outputs aligned with user expectations, quit this year to join Anthropic after claiming that “safety culture and processes have taken a backseat to shiny products” at OpenAI.
These days, OpenAI is focused on figuring out what the future of ChatGPT looks like.
“I’d be very surprised if a year from now this thing still looks like a chatbot,” Turley says, adding that current chat-based interactions would soon feel as outdated as ’90s instant messaging. “We’ve gotten pretty sidetracked by just making the chatbot great, but really, it’s not what we meant to build. We meant to build something much more useful than that.”
Increasingly powerful and expensive
I talk with Turley over a video call as he sits in a vast conference room in OpenAI’s San Francisco headquarters that epitomizes the company’s transformation. The office is all sweeping curves and polished minimalism, a far cry from its original office that was often described as a drab, historic warehouse.
With roughly 2,000 employees, OpenAI has evolved from a scrappy research lab into a $150 billion tech powerhouse. The team is spread across numerous projects, including building underlying foundation models and developing non-text tools like the video generator, Sora. ChatGPT is still OpenAI’s highest-profile product by far. Its popularity has come with a lot of headaches.
“I’d be very surprised if a year from now this thing still looks like a chatbot”
ChatGPT still spins elaborate lies with unwavering confidence, but now they’re being cited in court filings and political discourse. It has allowed for an impressive amount of experimentation and creativity, but some of its most distinctive use cases turned out to be spam, scams, and AI-written college term papers.
While some publications (include The Verge’s parent company, Vox Media) are choosing to partner with OpenAI, others like The New York Times are opting to sue it for copyright infringement. And OpenAI is burning through cash at a staggering rate to keep the lights on.
Turley acknowledges that ChatGPT’s hallucinations are still a problem. “Our early adopters were very comfortable with the limitations of ChatGPT,” he says. “It’s okay that you’re going to double check what it said. You’re going to know how to prompt around it. But the vast majority of the world, they’re not engineers, and they shouldn’t have to be. They should just use this thing and rely on it like any other tool, and we’re not there yet.”
Accuracy is one of the ChatGPT team’s three focus areas for 2025. The others are speed and presentation (i.e., aesthetics).
“I think we have a long way to go in making ChatGPT more accurate and better at citing its sources and iterating on the quality of this product,” Turley says.
OpenAI is also still figuring out how to monetize ChatGPT. Despite deploying increasingly powerful and costly AI models, the company has maintained a limited free tier and a $20 monthly ChatGPT Plus service since February 2023.
When I ask Turley about rumors of a future $2,000 subscription, or if advertising will be baked into ChatGPT, he says there is “no current plan to raise prices.” As for ads: “We don’t care about how much time you spend on ChatGPT.”
“They should just use this thing and rely on it like any other tool, and we’re not there yet.”
“I’m really proud of the fact that we have incentives that are incredibly aligned with our users,” he says. Those who “use our product a lot pay us money, which is a very, very, upfront and direct transaction. I’m proud of that. Maybe we’ll have a technology that’s much more expensive to serve and we’re going to have to rethink that model. You gotta remain humble about where the technology is going to go.”
Only days after Turley tells me this, ChatGPT did get a new $200 price tag for a pro tier that includes access to a specialized reasoning model. Its main $20 Plus tier is sticking around but it’s clearly not the ceiling for what OpenAI thinks people will pay.
ChatGPT and other OpenAI services require vast amounts of computing power and data storage to keep its services running smoothly. On top of the user base OpenAI has gained through its own products, it’s poised to reach millions of more people through an Apple partnership that integrates ChatGPT with iOS and macOS.
That’s a lot of infrastructure pressure for a relatively young tech company, says ChatGPT engineering lead Sulman Choudhry. “Just keeping it up and running is a very, very big feat,” he says. People love features like ChatGPT’s advanced voice mode. But scaling limitations mean there’s often a significant gap between the the technology’s capabilities and what people can experience. “There’s a very, very big delta there, and that delta is sort of how you scale the technology and how you scale infrastructure.”
Even as OpenAI grapples with these problems, it’s trying to work itself deeper into users’ lives. The company is racing to build agents, or AI tools that can perform complex, multistep tasks autonomously. In the AI world, these are called tasks with a longer “time horizon,” requiring the AI to maintain coherence over a longer period while handling multiple steps. For instance, earlier this year at the company’s Dev Day conference, OpenAI showcased AI agents that could make phone calls to place food orders and make hotel reservations in multiple languages.
For Turley and others, this is where the stakes will get particularly steep. Agents could make AI far more useful by moving what it can do outside the chatbot interface. The shift could also grant these tools an alarming level of access to the rest of your digital life.
“I’m really excited to see where things go in a more agentic direction with AI,” Kim tells me. “Right now, you go to the model with your question but I’m excited to see the model more integrated into your life and doing things proactively, and taking actions on your behalf”
The goal of ChatGPT isn’t to be just a chatbot, says Fedus. As it exists today, ChatGPT is “pretty constrained” by its interface and compute. He says the goal is to create an entity that you can talk to, call, and trust to work for you. Fedus thinks systems like OpenAI’s “reasoning” line of models, which create a trail of checkable steps explaining their logic, could make it more reliable for these kinds of tasks.
Turley says that, contrary to some reports, “I don’t think there’s going to be such a thing as an OpenAI agent.” What you will see is “increasingly agentic functionality inside of ChatGPT,” though. “Our focus is going to be to release this stuff as gradually as possible. The last thing I want is a big bang release where this stuff can suddenly go out and do things over hours of time with all your stuff.”
“The last thing I want is a big bang release”
By ChatGPT’s third anniversary next year, OpenAI will probably look a lot different than it does today. The company will likely raise billions more dollars in 2025, release its next big “Orion” model, face growing competition, and have to navigate the complexity of a new US president and his AI czar.
Turley hopes 2024’s version of ChatGPT will soon feel as quaint as AOL Instant Messenger. A year from now, we’ll probably laugh at how basic it was, he says. “Remember when all we could do was ask it questions?”
Technology
Amazon’s Echo Hub gets a customizable new look and Ring’s AI features
Amazon’s rolling out a free software update for Echo Hub devices that gives the home screen a much-needed update to the interface it launched with in 2024. It had already added Alex Plus AI support, but the new interface has a cleaner, fully customizable layout that fits more smart home info and controls on the screen than the previous version.
The Echo Hub is also getting access to Ring AI’s Video Search feature that lets you use natural language to search through your smart home camera footage, as well as Alexa Plus summaries of detected camera events.
These are the five new features Amazon highlighted for the Echo Hub:
Organize by r …
Read the full story at The Verge.
Technology
Grandparents are identity theft’s biggest payday
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
The FBI calls it a “distress scam.” It is also known as a grandparent scam. The scam works by making an older adult believe a grandchild is in serious trouble and needs money right away, often before a court date or legal deadline. Victims reported more than $5 million in losses to this type of fraud in 2025. The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center also noted that reported losses likely show only part of what scammers actually stole.
The Federal Trade Commission found in August 2025 that some of the fastest-growing scams targeting older adults use fear and urgency to override good judgment. A caller may claim your bank account was hacked and say you need to move your money immediately to protect it. However, the money does not move to safety. It goes straight to the scammer.
HOW TO HAND OFF DATA PRIVACY RESPONSIBILITIES FOR OLDER ADULTS TO A TRUSTED LOVED ONE
AI voice-cloning tools have made these scams even more convincing. Scammers can use a birthday video, voicemail or social media clip to mimic a grandchild’s voice. Then they place the call. The voice sounds familiar, the emergency feels real and the request for bail money seems urgent. The FBI counted $352 million in AI-related scam losses among victims 60 and older this past year.
Join CyberGuy Live: Lock Down Your Phone in 30 Minutes (This Saturday, June 13, 10 am ET)
- Your phone holds your email, passwords, photos, banking apps and personal data. In this free, live online class, Kurt the CyberGuy will walk you step by step through simple phone security fixes you can do in real time. You’ll learn how to improve your privacy settings, spot the latest phone scams, use trusted security tools and walk away with a simple checklist to stay protected. Register here: CyberGuyLive.com
Scammers are using stolen personal data, AI voice cloning and urgent phone calls to trick grandparents into sending money. (ljubaphoto/Getty Images)
What makes grandparents worth targeting
The same three pieces of data are required for identity verification at most banks, brokerages, pension recordkeepers, and Medicare: date of birth, last four digits of a Social Security number, and a current mailing address. For most people in their sixties and seventies, all of those accounts are open.
Those three fields have turned up in breach after breach. The Conduent Business Services breach pulled names, SSNs, dates of birth, and home addresses for more than 25 million Americans from systems that process Medicaid records and employer health plans. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton called it the largest data breach in U.S. history in February 2026.
Americans between 65 and 74 held a median net worth of $409,900 in 2022, according to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances, more than ten times the median for adults under 35. The FBI found average losses of approximately $38,500 per victim among Americans 60 and older in 2025, nearly double the figure for younger filers.
Why elder fraud losses are often underreported
Older adults reported $2.4 billion in fraud losses to the Federal Trade Commission in 2024. However, the FTC’s December 2025 report to Congress estimated that real losses may have reached $81.5 billion that year. Most cases likely went unreported.
That gap makes identity theft harder to stop. A fraudulent wire from a pension account may never alert a bank. A new credit account opened with stolen information may not reach the victim until it appears on a credit report. By then, weeks may have passed since the application was approved.
Account protections worth setting up
Scammers move fast, so it helps to set up account protections before anything goes wrong. These steps can give banks, brokerage firms and family members more ways to spot trouble early.
1) Add a trusted contact to brokerage accounts
Brokerage accounts have a protection option many account holders never activate: a trusted contact designation. Under FINRA Rule 4512, brokerage firms must ask for a trusted contact when you open or update an account. A trusted contact can be a family member, attorney or accountant. The firm can contact that person if it suspects financial exploitation or cannot reach you. However, that person cannot trade, withdraw funds or view your account balances. FINRA, the SEC and the North American Securities Administrators Association asked investors in August 2025 to contact their firm and add one. You can name more than one trusted contact. You can also change the designation at any time.
SOCIAL SECURITY ADMINISTRATION PHISHING SCAM TARGETS RETIREES
Families can help protect older adults by adding trusted contacts, verifying urgent calls and blocking online Social Security changes. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
2) Ask about holds on suspicious withdrawals
Under FINRA Rule 2165, brokerage firms can place a temporary hold on disbursements when they reasonably believe financial exploitation may be happening. That hold can last up to 55 business days. In January 2026, FINRA proposed extending the window to 145 business days. Ask any firm holding a pension, brokerage or annuity account about its policy on disbursements after an address change.
3) Verify urgent calls before sending money
When a caller claims a grandchild is in trouble or a federal agent needs immediate action, hang up. Then call back using a number you already have, not the number in the message. The FTC found that 41% of older adults who reported losing $10,000 or more to impersonation scams in 2024 said a phone call was the initial point of contact. That makes one simple habit especially important: verify the story before you act.
4) Block online changes to Social Security
Social Security lets you block electronic and automated telephone access to your account record. Once blocked, no one can change your direct deposit information or mailing address online or through the automated phone system. After that, any changes must go through a live SSA representative at 1-800-772-1213 or a field office visit. FINRA also operates a free Securities Helpline for Seniors at 844-574-3577, Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET.
Identity theft recovery is harder on your own
Even strong account protections may not catch every scam attempt. That is why identity theft monitoring and recovery support can help families respond faster when personal information gets exposed or misused.
Some identity theft protection services monitor dark web marketplaces, data broker sites and people-search sites for exposed Social Security numbers, addresses and other personal information. If fraud happens, recovery support may help contact creditors, file disputes with the three credit bureaus and organize the documentation needed to restore an identity.
OUTSMART HACKERS WHO ARE OUT TO STEAL YOUR IDENTITY
Older Americans remain prime targets for identity theft because scammers can exploit exposed Social Security numbers, birth dates and addresses. (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)
Some plans also include identity theft insurance for eligible recovery costs, such as lost wages and legal fees.
No service prevents every misuse of an older adult’s identity. However, family monitoring and fraud resolution can shorten the time between when theft happens and when you or someone in your family acts on it.
See my tips and best picks on Best Identity Theft Protection at Cyberguy.com
Kurt’s key takeaways
Grandparents have become a prime target because scammers know where the money is and how to create panic fast. A familiar voice, a stolen Social Security number or a fake emergency can turn one phone call into a devastating loss. The best defense starts before the call comes. Add trusted contacts to financial accounts, block online Social Security changes, verify urgent requests through a number you already know and talk openly with family about scam warning signs. Identity theft protection can also help spot exposed personal information and speed up recovery if fraud happens. No family can stop every scam attempt. However, a simple plan can give older adults more time, more backup and a better chance of keeping their money safe.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Is enough being done to stop scammers from using AI voices and stolen data to target grandparents? Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com
Sign up for my FREE CyberGuy Report
- Get my best tech tips, urgent security alerts and exclusive deals delivered straight to your inbox.
- For simple, real-world ways to spot scams early and stay protected, visit CyberGuy.com – trusted by millions who watch CyberGuy on TV daily.
- Plus, you’ll get instant access to my Ultimate Scam Survival Guide free when you join.
Copyright 2026 CyberGuy.com. All rights reserved.
Technology
A warrantless wiretap law is about to expire — but surveillance networks aren’t actually ‘going dark’
Congress has failed to pass a three-week extension of Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), with the House voting 218-198 against reauthorizing the controversial warrantless wiretapping authority through July 2nd. After a short-term extension earlier this year, the spying program now appears set to lapse for at least a week. This is the nightmare scenario FISA’s proponents have been warning about — but it doesn’t actually mean the US has lost its surveillance capabilities.
Proponents of a clean extension claim a lapse will hinder intelligence agencies’ efforts to thwart potential terrorist attacks, with surveillance networks “going dark”. Sen. Tom Cotton (R-AR) stressed the importance of reauthorizing Section 702 ahead of the World Cup. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) has said even a brief lapse would be disastrous. “Democrats in the Senate are playing political games right now with the lives of Americans,” he told reporters Wednesday. “It’s a very dangerous situation.”
In March, the FISA court recertified surveillance under Section 702 until 2027. The Brennan Center for Justice notes that a lapse won’t allow telecom companies to flout requests to hand over communications information to the NSA and other spy agencies. In 2008, after Yahoo failed to comply with a Section 702 request during a lapse, the FISA court ruled that the directives issued under Section 702 are effective while the certification is in place — even in the event of a lapse.
“The phrase ‘going dark’ is significantly misleading,” Andrea Sawka Fiegl, the senior policy director for media and technology at Common Cause, said on a Tuesday press call. Fiegl added that companies don’t choose whether they participate in surveillance under Section 702. If they don’t comply after being served with a directive, they face fines starting at $250,000 a day.
“The ‘going dark’ framing is basically a pressure tactic designed to strip Congress of its leverage to negotiate reforms by creating this false binary,” Fiegl said. “There is ample time for Congress to consider and pass reforms.”
Among those reforms are a warrant requirement for queries involving US persons, including so-called “backdoor searches” in which intelligence agencies identify a foreign target with ties to a US person, and then search that person’s communications, thus granting them access to their desired US target. Reformers also want to prohibit intelligence agencies from buying Americans’ data from private brokers to get around warrant requirements.
“Every day that Section 702 is in effect without reforms is a day that Americans’ rights are under threat,” Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) said in a statement Wednesday night, after Senate Republicans blocked his request for a five-week extension of Section 702 with new transparency requirements. “If there is going to be an extension of these authorities, there needs to be some guardrails or at least some transparency that would allow Congress and the American people to understand the abuses that have taken place and the need for reforms.”
Though President Donald Trump and Republican leaders in both chambers have called for a clean reauthorization of Section 702, there’s bipartisan appetite for reform — and a handful of Republican holdouts stand in the way of a clean reauthorization. Most Democrats — even some who have supported reauthorization in the past — have objected to a clean extension due to Trump’s appointment of Bill Pulte as acting director of national intelligence.
-
Detroit, MI11 minutes ago
Mayor Sheffield absent from People Mover board during alleged wrongdoing
-
San Francisco, CA21 minutes agoDay Around the Bay: All BART Stations In San Francisco Now Have Free Wi-Fi
-
Dallas, TX26 minutes agoReunion Tower debuts World Cup light show as Dallas welcomes fans
-
Boston, MA35 minutes agoNew England restaurants adding gratuity to bills during World Cup
-
Denver, CO41 minutes ago1 transported after e-bike crash on I-70 in Denver
-
Seattle, WA48 minutes agoWEST SEATTLE CRIME WATCH: Street robbery reported north of Morgan Junction
-
San Diego, CA51 minutes agoSan Diego Fire-Rescue Foundation prepared to step up support amid budget concerns
-
Milwaukee, WI56 minutes agoSoutheast Wisconsin severe weather; Kenosha, Burlington see storm damage