Sam Altman on GPT-6: 'People want memory'
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Sam Altman on GPT-6: 'People want memory'

August 19, 2025
12:51 PM
4 min read
AI Enhanced
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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman says the next version of ChatGPT will be more personal than its predecssors.

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4 min read

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August 19, 2025

12:51 PM

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OpenAI CEO Sam Altman, pictured, speaks with SoftBank Group CEO Masayoshi Son at an event in Tokyo on Feb. 3, 2025.Tomohiro Ohsumi | Getty Images News | Getty ImagesGPT-5 just launched

GPT-6 is already on the way.That's the message OpenAI CEO Sam Altman dered to reporters in San Francisco last week, offering a rare glimpse into the company's evolving duct road map, as well as its missteps.Altman didn't give a release date for his company's next artificial intelligence model, but he made that GPT-6 will be different and that it will arrive faster than the gap between GPT-4 and GPT-5

It won't just respond to users but will adapt to them, and allow people to create chatbots that mirror personal tastes.He said he sees memory as the key for making ChatGPT truly personal

It needs to remember who you are — your preferences, routines and quirks — and adapt accordingly."People want memory," Altman said. "People want duct features that require us to be able to understand them."He said OpenAI has been working closely with psychologists to help shape the duct, measuring how people feel while tracking well-being over time

The company hasn't made that data public, but Altman indicated it might.He also said that future versions of ChatGPT would comply with a recent executive order from the Trump administration that requires AI systems used by the federal government to be ideologically neutral and customizable"I think our duct should have a fairly center-of-the-road, middle stance, and then you should be able to push it pretty far," Atlman said. "If you're , 'I want you to be super woke' — it should be super woke."He added that if a user wanted the model to be conservative, it should also reflect that as well.Read more CNBC newsBill Gates meets Willy Wonka: How Epic's 82-year-old billionaire CEO built her software factorySamsung taking market from Apple in U.S. as foldable phones gain momentumOpenAI in talks to sell around $6 billion in stock at roughly $500 billion valuation IPOs are roaring after 'years of hibition' — it may be too goodAltman's s GPT-6 a rocky rollout of GPT-5

Users took to social media to complain the model being colder, less connected and less helpful than the prior version."I the new one much better," he said, acknowledging that the rollout was mishandled

He noted that OpenAI quietly pushed a tone to GPT-5 that's "much warmer."While Altman called enhanced memory his favorite feature launched this year, he said there are privacy concerns, particularly because temporary memory isn't encrypted

That means sensitive information could potentially be exposed without stronger safeguards

Altman confirmed that encryption "very well could be" added, though there's no timeline yet.Queries involving legal or medical information, he said, need to be treated with adequate privacy tections that aren't in place today."It's in society's interest for people to get good medical advice … good legal advice," he said. "And if you can get better versions of those from AI, you ought to be able to have the same tection for the same reason we decided you could get them from a doctor or a lawyer."He's looking to the future and brain-computer interfaces

Altman said he finds "neural interfaces a cool idea" and imagines being able to "think something and have ChatGPT respond.""There are a few areas adjacent to AI that I think are worth us doing something, and this is one of them," he said, adding that he's also interested in energy, novel substrates, robots and faster ways to build data centers.For now, OpenAI's core consumer duct remains ChatGPT, and Altman said he's focused on making it more flexible and more useful in daily life

He said he already relies on it for everything from work to parenting questions.He said, however, that there are limits."The models have already saturated the chat use case," Altman said. "They're not going to get much better. ..

And maybe they're going to get worse."Don’t miss these insights from CNBC Forget Palantir

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