One year ago today, on November 30, 2022, OpenAI released ChatGPT. It's uncommon for a single product to create as much impact on the tech industry as ChatGPT has in just one year.
Imagine a computer that can talk to you. Nothing new, right? Those have been around since the 1960s. But ChatGPT, the application that first brought large language models (LLMs) to a wide audience, felt different. It could compose poetry, seemingly understand the context of your questions and your conversation, and help you solve problems. Within a few months, it became the fastest-growing consumer application of all time. And it created a frenzy in the tech world.
During these 365 days, ChatGPT has broadened the public perception of AI, captured imaginations, attracted critics, and stoked existential angst. It emboldened and reoriented Microsoft, made Google dance, spurred fears of AGI taking over the world, captivated world leaders, prompted attempts at government regulation, helped add words to dictionaries, inspired conferences and copycats, led to a crisis for educators, hyper-charged automated defamation, embarrassed lawyers by hallucinating, prompted lawsuits over training data, and much more.
For some, ChatGPT has also proven itself a useful tool, accelerating programming tasks for certain software developers, assisting writers with compositional and editing chores, and providing quick, ad-free and cookie-banner-free advice on topics at a time when some social media sites have fractured and our previous oracle of sometimes-iffy Internet knowledge, Google, has fallen into terrible disrepair.
"Imagine if every human being could automate the tedious, repetitive information tasks in their lives, without needing to first get a computer science degree," AI researcher Simon Willison told Ars in an interview about ChatGPT's impact. "I'm seeing glimpses that LLMs might help make a huge step in that direction."