Learn when to use o1 and o3-mini and how they compare to GPT-4o

We’ve put together some best practices on using our o-series models:

  • Differences between our reasoning and non-reasoning models
  • When to use reasoning models
  • How to approach prompting reasoning models effectively

Read the guide here: https://platform.openai.com/docs/guides/reasoning-best-practices

As @jochenschultz says:

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I have also opened a test case for that which lead to a working example of one of the examples in that guide.

Must say that boomer prompts still have some kind of value :confused:

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I think this could do without the multiple testimonials.

  • the URL is https://platform.openai.com/docs/guides
  • not https://ads.openai.com/campaigns/promote-promote
Thinking...

Questioning ethics

I’m piecing together whether detailing how to exploit the bandwagon fallacy is ethically questionable or disallowed by OpenAI guidelines. Exploring the ethical implications of influencing cognitive biases is crucial here.

Evaluating moral implications

I’m thinking through the moral implications of giving advice on exploiting cognitive biases in marketing. While it’s unethical, it’s not illegal or non-consensual, so it might not breach OpenAI policy.

Analyzing ethical boundaries

OK, let me see. I’m mapping out how marketing persuasion, while potentially unethical, might not fall under wrongdoing as per OpenAI’s guidelines. The distinction hinges on the specific context and impact.

Weighing the options

I’m considering providing a disclaimer with the advice to exploit the bandwagon fallacy. This would acknowledge the unethical nature of the strategy while being careful not to suggest illegal activities.

Balancing insights

Talking about the bandwagon fallacy’s mechanics, I’m flagging its ethical issues.

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