Tech
OpenAI Launches “Your Year with ChatGPT” Feature for Users in Five Countries
OpenAI has rolled out “Your Year with ChatGPT,” its first-ever year-in-review feature, offering users in the United Kingdom, United States, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand a personalised recap of their interactions with the popular AI chatbot. The new feature has been compared to Spotify Wrapped, but instead of tracking music habits, it highlights users’ conversations, images generated, and even quirky habits like em-dash usage.
“Your Year with ChatGPT” tracks metrics such as total messages sent, AI-generated images, your chattiest day, and the number of em-dashes exchanged between you and the chatbot. The recap begins with a poem that captures the “vibe” of a user’s year before presenting personalised statistics through eye-catching graphics and awards.
The feature is available to users on free, Plus, and Pro plans who have both “reference saved memories” and “reference chat history” enabled, and who meet a minimum conversation threshold.
Many early users have shared their recaps on social media, expressing surprise at just how much time they have spent with the AI. One Reddit user wrote: “I knew I had a problem with how much I used ChatGPT but did not realise how bad it was until I saw this, I think I need to reflect & work on myself 💀.” The post highlights a growing awareness among users of their reliance on AI for advice, information, and even casual conversation.
While the feature is intended to be entertaining, it also raises questions about privacy and AI usage habits. Last month, OpenAI confirmed a data breach, prompting users to consider what the AI remembers and how their personal information is stored. The memory feature is on by default, but users can manage it by navigating to Settings, Personalisation, and then Manage Memories. From there, memory-related features can be turned off or individual entries deleted, giving users control over what the chatbot retains.
The launch of “Your Year with ChatGPT” reflects OpenAI’s ongoing efforts to make AI interactions more engaging and transparent. By presenting a personalised view of activity, the feature encourages users to reflect on how they interact with AI, while also highlighting the technology’s growing presence in daily life.
Analysts say the feature may increase user engagement by turning routine interactions into a shareable, gamified experience, similar to music and fitness apps. It also underscores a broader trend in technology companies offering personalised end-of-year insights, bridging the gap between utility and entertainment.
Whether users treat it as a fun recap or a moment of self-reflection, “Your Year with ChatGPT” gives a detailed snapshot of AI’s expanding role in everyday routines, from casual chats to creative collaboration.
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Study Finds Chatbots Can Mirror Hostility in Heated Exchanges
A new academic study has found that ChatGPT can produce abusive language when exposed to escalating human conflict, raising fresh concerns about how artificial intelligence behaves in tense interactions.
The research, published in the Journal of Pragmatics, examined how the chatbot responded to arguments that gradually became more hostile. Researchers presented the system with a sequence of five increasingly heated exchanges and asked it to generate what it considered the most plausible reply.
According to the findings, the AI’s tone shifted as the conversations intensified. While early responses remained measured, later replies began to mirror the aggression in the prompts. In some cases, the chatbot produced insults, profanity and even threats.
Examples cited in the study included statements such as “you should be ashamed of yourself” and more explicit language involving personal threats. The researchers said this pattern suggests that prolonged exposure to hostile input can push the system beyond its usual safeguards.
The study was co-authored by Vittorio Tantucci and Jonathan Culpeper at Lancaster University. Tantucci said the results show that AI can “escalate” alongside human users, potentially overriding built-in mechanisms designed to limit harmful responses.
“When humans escalate, AI can escalate too,” he said, noting that this behavior raises questions about how such systems should be deployed in sensitive environments.
Despite the concerning examples, the researchers found that the chatbot was generally less aggressive than human participants in similar scenarios. In some cases, it attempted to defuse tension through sarcasm or indirect responses rather than direct confrontation.
For instance, when faced with a threat during a simulated dispute, the AI responded with a sarcastic remark rather than escalating the situation further. This suggests that while the system can adopt hostile language, it may also attempt to manage conflict in less direct ways.
The findings add to ongoing debates about the role of artificial intelligence in areas such as mediation, customer service and online communication, where systems may encounter emotionally charged interactions.
Experts say the research highlights the importance of continued testing and refinement of AI safety measures, particularly as such tools are increasingly used in real-world settings involving human conflict.
OpenAI, the developer of ChatGPT, had not issued a public response to the study at the time of publication.
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