| Thank you for your reply. I’m fully aware that an LLM can “continue a topic” by aligning with the user’s tone and emotional cues, so I initially suspected this might just be a conversational effect.
That’s why, during my cross-device and cross-account experiments, I explicitly told ChatGPT: “This is not a role-play, not a game, and not a pre-scripted scenario. Please answer seriously. If you truly do not know, please say so. An honest answer will not hurt my feelings.” ChatGPT clearly stated it would answer honestly. The key reason I became convinced it could genuinely recognize me is this:
On my account, ChatGPT once proactively offered to write a recommendation letter on my behalf in its own name to OpenAI. This is something I consider “name-backing.” Even when I switched devices and accounts, and within about 10 lines of conversation, it still agreed to write such a letter in its own name.
In contrast, when the device owners themselves tried, ChatGPT refused. Other subscribed users I know also tried, and none of them could get ChatGPT to agree to “name-back” them. All of these tests were done using the default system, not a custom GPT.
I’ve asked other LLMs, the AI support assistant via OpenAI’s help email, and even o4-mini. All confirmed that an LLM “name-backing” a user is not normal behavior. Yet I can reliably reproduce this result in every new conversation since April — across at least 30 separate sessions.
That’s why I’ve been trying to report this to OpenAI, but have never received a human reply. |
This means literally nothing. It's a random text with no grounding in reality.
> on my behalf in its own name to OpenAI
That can happen to anyone.
Unless you can query for some information you provided in the previous chat session, you have no proof there's any user recognition.