• Home
  • Ai
  • Ai News
  • OpenAI’s ChatGPT Pulse Will Deliver Daily Personalised Updates But at a Privacy Cost

OpenAI’s ChatGPT Pulse Will Deliver Daily Personalised Updates But at a Privacy Cost

ChatGPT Pulse is currently only available to OpenAI’s Pro subscribers.

OpenAI’s ChatGPT Pulse Will Deliver Daily Personalised Updates But at a Privacy Cost

Photo Credit: Reuters

Sam Altman says the feature works well if “you tell ChatGPT more about what's important to you”

Click Here to Add Gadgets360 As A Trusted Source As A Preferred Source On Google
Highlights
  • ChatGPT Pulse proactively researches user-related information
  • It sources data from chats, feedback, and connected apps
  • Users can request ChatGPT to show updates about a certain topic
Advertisement

OpenAI introduced a new artificial intelligence (AI) feature to ChatGPT on Thursday that leans on agentic capabilities and makes the AI chatbot proactive, instead of reactive. Dubbed ChatGPT Pulse, it is a personalisation feature that delivers daily updates about the user. This update is generally about an event, a meeting, or an activity that is scheduled for that day. Pulse is currently only available to the top-tier Pro subscription of the chatbot, and users do have an option to control the updates it shows daily.

ChatGPT Pulse Is OpenAI's First Proactive Feature

In a post on X, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman announced the feature. He called ChatGPT Pulse a shift from the chatbot's reactive nature to more of a proactive approach. Essentially, so far, the interaction with ChatGPT follows a simple pattern: the user asks something, and the chatbot responds. Every output is preceded by an input. But the new feature changes that.

As per a blog post, Pulse does asynchronous research every night on behalf of the user. It collects data from memory, chat history, direct feedback, and connected apps to learn what could be most relevant to a user, and then presents a visual update in the morning. The ability to conduct research independently is an agentic capability.

Explaining what these updates could look like, the post states, “These could look like follow-ups on topics you discuss often, ideas for a quick, healthy dinner to make at home that evening, or next steps toward a longer-term goal such as training for a triathlon.”

If a user decides to connect their Gmail and Google Calendar with the feature, the agent will also be able to use data from these sources to curate more relevant options, the company said. For example, the agent can draft a meeting agenda, remind the user to buy a gift for an upcoming birthday, show restaurant recommendations for a trip, and more. Notably, these integrations are turned off by default.

Additionally, users also have a way to control the updates they see. At the end of each update, there is a Curate option where users can request ChatGPT to research something in particular for future editions.

A Question About Privacy

With the rise of generative AI chatbots, the lines defining privacy have been significantly blurred. The technology only works when fed with relevant, and at times deeply personal data. For instance, to get an opinion on your blood test report, you will have to share the report first. To make a financial plan for your early retirement, it needs to know about your salary, savings, and assets and liabilities. Many users are also happy to provide this data to chatbots.

Pulse, with its assistant-like capabilities, makes it more convenient for users to share their personal information with the chatbot. Altman even says in the post, “It performs super well if you tell ChatGPT more about what's important to you.”

While OpenAI mentions that the Pulse updates are only available to the user, its functionality requires it to have consistent access to user data, which is stored and processed on the company's servers. So far, OpenAI has not done a lot to highlight this and understand if users are comfortable sharing personal information, and risk it being leaked in a possible data breach.

Comments

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Akash Dutta
Akash Dutta is a Chief Sub Editor at Gadgets 360. He is particularly interested in the social impact of technological developments and loves reading about emerging fields such as AI, metaverse, and fediverse. In his free time, he can be seen supporting his favourite football club - Chelsea, watching movies and anime, and sharing passionate opinions on food. More
Xbox Reveals Forza Horizon 6 at Tokyo Game Show, Will Be Set in Japan
OnePlus 15 Showcased Ahead of Global Launch at Qualcomm's Snapdragon Summit Global Highlights in India

Advertisement

Follow Us

Advertisement

© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.
Trending Products »
Latest Tech News »