Enderman told Gizmodo he has tried generating keys for multiple programs using the GPT-4 model, finding it handles key generation better than earlier versions of the large language model.
Enderman told Gizmodo he has tried generating keys for multiple programs using the GPT-4 model, finding it handles key generation better than earlier versions of the large language model. One of the main selling points of GPT-4 was its ability to handle longer, more complex prompts. GPT-3 and 3.5 would routinely fail to create accurate answers when doing 3-digit arithmetic or “reasoning” tasks like unscrambling words. The latest version of the LLM got noticeably better at these sorts of tasks, at least if you’re looking at scores on tests like the verbal GRE or Math SAT. Still, the system isn’t perfect by any means, especially as its learning data is still mostly natural language text scraped from the internet. Don’t expect to start getting free keys for modern programs, though. As the YouTuber points out in his video, Windows 95 keys are far easier to spoof than keys for Windows XP and beyond, as Microsoft has started implimenting Product IDs into the operating system installati...