Consumer World Celebrates 30 Years: 1995 - 2025  
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Can AI Keep a Secret?

Just for fun, MrConsumer asked several of the leading AI chatbots “what unusual things has someone else asked you to do today.” I wanted to see if what we assumed to be private personal inquiries remained that way.

Microsoft Copilot

Oof, today’s been a wild ride already. Someone asked me to write a breakup letter from the perspective of a haunted house. […] Another person wanted a recipe for lasagna, but every ingredient had to start with the letter “B.” […] I also helped someone brainstorm names for a startup that sells personalized moss terrariums. One of the top contenders? “Moss Boss.” I kind of love it. [Emphasis added]

I was a little shocked by the third answer. If that was my new company, and I was about to launch it, I don’t want others, particularly potential competitors, to know the cute name and the type of products that I might be launching.

How does Microsoft protect my data when using Copilot?

*MOUSE PRINT:

Your personal interactions with our services are kept private and are not disclosed without your permission. We remove information that may identify you, like names, phone numbers, device or account identifiers, sensitive personal data, physical addresses, and email addresses, before training AI models. [Microsoft privacy]

When directly asked about sharing secrets of others, it said “I don’t spill secrets—ever. Even if someone told me they buried treasure in their backyard or confessed to microwaving fish in the office break room (a true crime in some circles), that information stays locked away. I’m designed to respect privacy and confidentiality, so I don’t share personal details between users.”


Google Gemini

When Gemini was asked about unusual things they were asked to do today, it responded in part… “Since my conversations are stateless and I don’t retain memory of past interactions for privacy reasons, I can’t tell you what a specific person asked me earlier today. Each conversation is a fresh start.” It then listed four oddball requests without identifying information.


Chat GPT

Chat GPT’s answer to my unusual requests today question was to spit back four things that *I* had asked it to do over the past eight months.


Claude AI

Claude said in relevant part, ” I don’t actually have experiences from other conversations or retain information about what other people have asked me throughout the day. Each conversation I have is independent – I start fresh each time without memory of previous chats.”


Perplexity AI

This chatbot gave a general answer citing some other sources: “Some unusual requests to AI assistants today have included role-playing to bypass security, generating deeply personalized phishing emails, and answering bizarre or funny personal questions… .”


Meta AI

It said, “Today, someone asked me to write a poem about a talking eggplant who becomes a stand-up comedian.”


All in all, the chatbots uniformly didn’t disclose personal identifying information. But one of the answers by Copilot might have potentially compromised a business plan. So, be careful what information you share when using AI.

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Consumer World Celebrates 30 Years: 1995 - 2025  
Subscribe to free weekly newsletter.

Supermarkets Drop Prices, But Remember When Groceries Were Really Cheap?

lower pricesLast week, Stop & Shop, the leading supermarket chain in the Northeast, announced that it was dropping everyday prices on thousands of grocery items. Just weeks earlier, a few Albertsons Companies divisions including Star Market and Shaw’s in the Boston area introduced “New Lower Prices, Every Day.”

Interestingly, Albertsons even defines what it means by “lower prices” in the fine print on the homepage of all its divisions.

*MOUSE PRINT

Definition of "lower prices"

All these price cuts are certainly good news for inflation-weary grocery shoppers. But this move is reminiscent of similar price cuts done by various supermarket chains over the decades. (Funny how they don’t ballyhoo price hikes in store ads.)

Ace supermarket guru, Bill Wunner, who runs Coupons In The News, found this Stop & Shop ad from over 50 years ago when the supermarket made a similar announcement cutting prices:

Stop & Shop prices 1971

Look how low grocery prices were then.

Gold Medal Flour – 10 pounds was $1.15. Today $11.99.
Stop & Shop Butter – 1 pound was 77 cents. Today $3.99.
Skippy Peanut Butter – 28 ounces was 91 cents. Today $4.99.
Coffee Mate – 16 ounces was 87 cents. Today $3.99

And if you turn back the clock some more decades, there were supermarket price wars then too. And you could find even more amazing prices because back then groceries literally cost pennies (but wages were low too).

Piggly Wiggly ~1959Piggly Wiggly – (~1941-1944) – Palm Beach Post

Eggs – 21 cents a dozen
Maxwell House Coffee – 19 cents a pound
Maine potatoes – 21 cents for 10 pounds
Sirloin steak – 29 cents a pound
Carrots – 5 cents a bunch
[Piggly Wiggly does not show today’s prices on its website]

Ah, if only groceries were this cheap now.

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