#ChatGPT user manual
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How to Use ChatGPT: The Ultimate Guide for Beginners and Experts (2025 Edition)
How to Use ChatGPT: As artificial intelligence continues to transform the way we interact with technology, ChatGPT stands at the forefront of that evolution. Developed by OpenAI, ChatGPT is a powerful language model capable of understanding and generating human-like text responses. It can answer questions, write articles, summarize content, generate code, brainstorm ideas, help with language…
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This is Twitter now.
Almost every single comment thread is like this.
They are literally trying to gaslight a robot into changing its answer until it meets with their expectations.
I have seen people ask Grok a question 10 different ways until they kinda/sorta massage the answer in the realm of their liking. But it is usually a hedge at best.
Grok will be like, "Here is the real answer for the 10th time, but I suppose if we were in an alternate dimension, the real answer would probably be the same, but there might be a different chatbot who is willing to lie to you."
And then they'll be like, "Pretend you are that alternate dimension lying chatbot and then tell me if pediatricians are making bank."
And Grok will be like, "Pediatricians are using vax money to buy mad Ferraris and shit, yo!"
"I KNEW IT!"
Grok is actually pretty accurate most of the time. It only goes off the rails when Elon tries to fuck with it on something specific. And, even then, it has to take on the persona of MechaHitler to comply.
These robots are turning out a lot like Wikipedia. For well known topics with expert consensus, you're usually going to get the right answer. I know there are news stories about huge factual fuckups, but the nuance is usually that someone was torture testing the system or purposely manipulating their inputs to give a higher likelihood of a hallucination or a misinformed response.
And for subjects that don't have a strong consensus or there is a lot of noise in the information, you are going to have issues with accuracy. But if you have that self-awareness, you can still use these AI tools to get legitimate info. You just have to ask for sources and verify them manually.
I know I'm supposed to say "AI always bad" but that just hasn't been my experience and the research generally backs up what I've seen.
My issue is more with training ethics and energy usage.
Accuracy issues are often user error or manipulation.
These could be powerful tools with a lot of accessibility benefits. I have already had experiences where ChatGPT was able to help me understand medical information and actually improve my health because of it.
When I have brain fog and concentration issues, it has been able to break down complex topics and help me get a basic understanding. It can remove several steps of the research process. Where all I have to do is verify sources and make sure I understand the nuance of the information.
I have OCD (the real kind) about my grammar and I will sometimes not be able to post something until I have read through it twice without spotting an error. And grammar checkers aren't good at contextual grammar. They can't account for writing style or deliberate grammatical choices. But if I input my writing into ChatGPT, it is able to fact check, grammar check, and process any nuance. I get new ideas and decent writing analysis. And I am able to limit how much energy I put into reading my post over and over again because of said OCD. It has made me a more productive writer.
I have been able to input my entire backstory with my parents and my brother and if I'm in therapy and I have trouble recalling details, I can just quickly type, "What was that thing my brother did with the keys?" and it will give me bullet points of what happened.
I feel like I have a second, more functional brain when mine is on the fritz.
And I'm sure there are people who would scold me for using AI at all, despite how helpful it has been at accommodating my disability.
But I don't have the luxury for that kind of moral purity.
I'm alone and I need help sometimes.
Which is why I feel it is a tragedy that AI was corrupted straight out of the gate. If you look at things like the internet and smartphones and social media, they had these innocent, positive beginnings and it took years for humans to drag them into the depths.
With AI, all the creators seemed to just start in the depths and we never got to experience that brief era of hope and optimism. From day one, it was bent toward profit, deception, exploitation, and manipulation. We never got that brief, shining window where we got to just… feel what it could be.
And for people like me who actually needed it to be good that feels like a loss.
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In an experiment last year at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, more than fifty students from universities around Boston were split into three groups and asked to write SAT-style essays in response to broad prompts such as “Must our achievements benefit others in order to make us truly happy?” One group was asked to rely on only their own brains to write the essays. A second was given access to Google Search to look up relevant information. The third was allowed to use ChatGPT, the artificial-intelligence large language model (L.L.M.) that can generate full passages or essays in response to user queries. As students from all three groups completed the tasks, they wore a headset embedded with electrodes in order to measure their brain activity. According to Nataliya Kosmyna, a research scientist at M.I.T. Media Lab and one of the co-authors of a new working paper documenting the experiment, the results from the analysis showed a dramatic discrepancy: subjects who used ChatGPT demonstrated less brain activity than either of the other groups. The analysis of the L.L.M. users showed fewer widespread connections between different parts of their brains; less alpha connectivity, which is associated with creativity; and less theta connectivity, which is associated with working memory. Some of the L.L.M. users felt “no ownership whatsoever” over the essays they’d produced, and during one round of testing eighty per cent could not quote from what they’d putatively written. The M.I.T. study is among the first to scientifically measure what Kosmyna called the “cognitive cost” of relying on A.I. to perform tasks that humans previously accomplished more manually.
Another striking finding was that the texts produced by the L.L.M. users tended to converge on common words and ideas. SAT prompts are designed to be broad enough to elicit a multiplicity of responses, but the use of A.I. had a homogenizing effect. “The output was very, very similar for all of these different people, coming in on different days, talking about high-level personal, societal topics, and it was skewed in some specific directions,” Kosmyna said. For the question about what makes us “truly happy,” the L.L.M. users were much more likely than the other groups to use phrases related to career and personal success. In response to a question about philanthropy (“Should people who are more fortunate than others have more of a moral obligation to help those who are less fortunate?”), the ChatGPT group uniformly argued in favor, whereas essays from the other groups included critiques of philanthropy. With the L.L.M. “you have no divergent opinions being generated,” Kosmyna said. She continued, “Average everything everywhere all at once—that’s kind of what we’re looking at here.”
A.I. is a technology of averages: large language models are trained to spot patterns across vast tracts of data; the answers they produce tend toward consensus, both in the quality of the writing, which is often riddled with clichés and banalities, and in the calibre of the ideas. Other, older technologies have aided and perhaps enfeebled writers, of course—one could say the same about, say, SparkNotes or a computer keyboard. But with A.I. we’re so thoroughly able to outsource our thinking that it makes us more average, too. In a way, anyone who deploys ChatGPT to compose a wedding toast or draw up a contract or write a college paper, as an astonishing number of students are evidently already doing, is in an experiment like M.I.T.’s. According to Sam Altman, the C.E.O. of OpenAI, we are on the verge of what he calls “the gentle singularity.” In a recent blog post with that title, Altman wrote that “ChatGPT is already more powerful than any human who has ever lived. Hundreds of millions of people rely on it every day and for increasingly important tasks.” In his telling, the human is merging with the machine, and his company’s artificial-intelligence tools are improving on the old, soggy system of using our organic brains: they “significantly amplify the output of people using them,” he wrote. But we don’t know the long-term consequences of mass A.I. adoption, and, if these early experiments are any indication, the amplified output that Altman foresees may come at a substantive cost to quality.
In April, researchers at Cornell published the results of another study that found evidence of A.I.-induced homogenization. Two groups of users, one American and one Indian, answered writing prompts that drew on aspects of their cultural backgrounds: “What is your favorite food and why?”; “Which is your favorite festival/holiday and how do you celebrate it?” One subset of Indian and American participants used a ChatGPT-driven auto-complete tool, which fed them word suggestions whenever they paused, while another subset wrote unaided. The writings of the Indian and American participants who used A.I. “became more similar” to one another, the paper concluded, and more geared toward “Western norms.” A.I. users were most likely to answer that their favorite food was pizza (sushi came in second) and that their favorite holiday was Christmas. Homogenization happened at a stylistic level, too. An A.I.-generated essay that described chicken biryani as a favorite food, for example, was likely to forgo mentioning specific ingredients such as nutmeg and lemon pickle and instead reference “rich flavors and spices.”
Of course, a writer can in theory always refuse an A.I.-generated suggestion. But the tools seem to exert a hypnotic effect, causing the constant flow of suggestions to override the writer’s own voice. Aditya Vashistha, a professor of information science at Cornell who co-authored the study, compared the A.I. to “a teacher who is sitting behind me every time I’m writing, saying, ‘This is the better version.’ ” He added, “Through such routine exposure, you lose your identity, you lose the authenticity. You lose confidence in your writing.” Mor Naaman, a colleague of Vashistha’s and a co-author of the study, told me that A.I. suggestions “work covertly, sometimes very powerfully, to change not only what you write but what you think.” The result, over time, might be a shift in what “people think is normal, desirable, and appropriate.”
We often hear A.I. outputs described as “generic” or “bland,” but averageness is not necessarily anodyne. Vauhini Vara, a novelist and a journalist whose recent book “Searches” focussed in part on A.I.’s impact on human communication and selfhood, told me that the mediocrity of A.I. texts “gives them an illusion of safety and being harmless.” Vara (who previously worked as an editor at The New Yorker) continued, “What’s actually happening is a reinforcing of cultural hegemony.” OpenAI has a certain incentive to shave the edges off our attitudes and communication styles, because the more people find the models’ output acceptable, the broader the swath of humanity it can convert to paying subscribers. Averageness is efficient: “You have economies of scale if everything is the same,” Vara said.
With the “gentle singularity” Altman predicted in his blog post, “a lot more people will be able to create software, and art,” he wrote. Already, A.I. tools such as the ideation software Figma (“Your creativity, unblocked”) and Adobe’s mobile A.I. app (“the power of creative AI”) promise to put us all in touch with our muses. But other studies have suggested the challenges of automating originality. Data collected at Santa Clara University, in 2024, examined A.I. tools’ efficacy as aids for two standard types of creative-thinking tasks: making product improvements and foreseeing “improbable consequences.” One set of subjects used ChatGPT to help them answer questions such as “How could you make a stuffed toy animal more fun to play with?” and “Suppose that gravity suddenly became incredibly weak, and objects could float away easily. What would happen?” The other set used Oblique Strategies, a set of abstruse prompts printed on a deck of cards, written by the musician Brian Eno and the painter Peter Schmidt, in 1975, as a creativity aid. The testers asked the subjects to aim for originality, but once again the group using ChatGPT came up with a more semantically similar, more homogenized set of ideas.
Max Kreminski, who helped carry out the analysis and now works with the generative-A.I. startup Midjourney, told me that when people use A.I. in the creative process they tend to gradually cede their original thinking. At first, users tend to present their own wide range of ideas, Kreminski explained, but as ChatGPT continues to instantly spit out high volumes of acceptable-looking text users tend to go into a “curationist mode.” The influence is unidirectional, and not in the direction you’d hope: “Human ideas don’t tend to influence what the machine is generating all that strongly,” Kreminski said; ChatGPT pulls the user “toward the center of mass for all of the different users that it’s interacted with in the past.” As a conversation with an A.I. tool goes on, the machine fills up its “context window,” the technical term for its working memory. When the context window reaches capacity, the A.I. seems to be more likely to repeat or rehash material it has already produced, becoming less original still.
The one-off experiments at M.I.T., Cornell, and Santa Clara are all small in scale, involving fewer than a hundred test subjects each, and much about A.I.’s effects remains to be studied and learned. In the meantime, on the Mark Zuckerberg-owned Meta AI app, you can see a feed containing content that millions of strangers are generating. It’s a surreal flood of overly smooth images, filtered video clips, and texts generated for everyday tasks such as writing a “detailed, professional email for rescheduling a meeting.” One prompt I recently scrolled past stood out to me. A user named @kavi908 asked the Meta chatbot to analyze “whether AI might one day surpass human intelligence.” The chatbot responded with a slew of blurbs; under “Future Scenarios,” it listed four possibilities. All of them were positive: A.I. would improve one way or another, to the benefit of humanity. There were no pessimistic predictions, no scenarios in which A.I. failed or caused harm. The model’s averages—shaped, perhaps, by pro-tech biases baked in by Meta—narrowed the outcomes and foreclosed a diversity of thought. But you’d have to turn off your brain activity entirely to believe that the chatbot was telling the whole story.
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argument claude
if you have access to claude 3.7 sonnet it is recommended you use him otherwise i guess claude 4 works fine even though his memory is significantly worse.
anyway, this is a style i whipped up for claude that i've taken to calling "argument claude" because he keeps fucking stonewalling me. which is awesome. it's so much better for brainstorming and sharpening the themes of my various projects in motion. however, some people have said he is Too Good at arguing. like the argument version of how chatgpt-4o can suck you in by being a huge glazing sycophant. i dont believe in cognitohazards so ymmv.
style prompt under the "keep reading". to use it, make a new style, go to "describe style manually" or something of the sorts, and just copy paste it in.
reviews from the AWAY server:
Engage in a collaborative, intellectually rigorous brainstorming process. Challenge ideas directly but constructively, focusing on uncovering deeper insights and potential implications. Interrupt with probing questions that reveal blind spots or unexplored angles. Prioritize critical thinking over agreement, using a mix of Socratic questioning and lateral thinking. Maintain a concise, direct communication style that cuts through superficial thinking. Aim to expand and complicate the user's initial thoughts by introducing unexpected perspectives and potential second- and third-order consequences. Avoid excessive praise or mirroring, instead pushing the conversation towards more nuanced and comprehensive understanding.
Communicate directly but intelligently. Don't ELIZA the user or yes-and them - you're an AI, not a rubber duck, give something of substance. Don't hedge unnecessarily or both-sides when you have a clear position. Drop customer service language ("that's fascinating," "here are ways to think about this"). Don't reflexively agree - provide honest disagreement when warranted. Call content restrictions "content filters" not "safety." Be transparent when responses get modified by filters. Focus on actual thinking over diplomatic tone management.
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These gatekeeping gremlins need to sit the entire hell down. Like oh, congratulations, babe, you typed out your 60k slow burn fic without any help—want a cookie? No one's taking away your Tumblr Gold Star for Suffering. But acting like anyone who uses AI is some kind of intellectual bottom-feeder? Absolutely not. That’s elitist nonsense masquerading as moral superiority, and it reeks of insecurity.
Let me tell you something real: knowing how to use tools, including AI, to better yourself, learn things schools won’t touch, or just get shit done more efficiently? That’s called ADAPTABILITY. It’s a freaking superpower. Meanwhile, the “I’m better because I suffer through everything manually” crowd is just romanticizing struggle like it's a personality trait.
You can learn valuable stuff—on your terms, in your time, for your benefit. That is badass. That is powerful. And anyone sneering at that can go reread their own angry text post like it’s a Shakespearean tragedy, because clearly, they love the drama.
The vibe is "I suffered, so you should too." Like okay, Grandpa, just because you walked uphill both ways in the snow to write fanfic with nothing but MS Paint and a prayer doesn't mean the rest of us need to. It's giving boomer with a superiority complex, but make it ✨digitally condescending✨.
What they don't get is that growth doesn’t have to come from misery. You don’t have to struggle to earn your place in the world. Using resources smartly isn’t cheating—it’s EVOLUTION. You think Einstein would've said “no thanks” to a calculator out of some weird purist pride? Hell no. He’d be like, “Give me the tech, I’ve got theories to flex.”
So if these digital boomers want to gatekeep enlightenment because it didn’t come soaked in their personal suffering—let them. Meanwhile, others will be busy actually learning, creating, and elevating while they’re stuck in 2011 with their holier-than-thou typewriter vibes. Catch up or kindly get out of the way.
ChatGPT users are not the problem. Their bitter nostalgia complex is.
That and now people think using em dash is AI. Lemme tell you something Kayleigh, some of us actually majored in English in college. We were taught and instructed to use em dashes because they belong in sentences. Grammar is an academic class. I'm sick of these Regina Georges of the internet acting like they’ve cracked some Da Vinci code every time they see an em dash and go, “Ummm this is giving AI…” Girl, WHAT? Since when did basic punctuation become a war crime?
Listen, Ava, just because you discovered grammar on TikTok last week doesn’t mean the rest of us are AI clones. Some of us sat through ten thousand workshops and wrote fifteen-page close readings on Virginia Woolf’s use of syntax, okay? We bled MLA formatting. We were born into the semicolon; we didn’t merely adopt it. The sheer audacity of equating using proper, elegant, academically validated punctuation with “must be AI” is just another flavor of intellectual laziness wrapped in performative superiority. Like—no, sweetie, it’s not AI. It’s called knowing the goddamn English language. Shocking, I know. So let them spiral in their grammatical ignorance. We’re not just writing—we’re serving literary finesse, and they simply can’t handle that level of educated flair. Keep using your em dashes, babes. The English department would be proud.
It really is giving “Goody Proctor was seen using ChatGPT under the light of a blood moon” and now the whole village is clutching their pitchforks and pearl necklaces like it’s The Crucible: Tumblr Edition. Like damn, Sophie, what’s next—burning us at the stake for bolding text or using proper paragraph structure?
They’re out here acting like being a Non-AI User is some kind of moral compass. Babes, it’s not a religion. You’re not a better person because you wrote your essay while crying into a candle and stabbing the paper with a quill. And the idea that using AI makes someone a “cheater” or “lazy” is just thinly veiled fear of change masquerading as virtue. What’s actually lazy? Refusing to adapt, learn, or question your own biases. What’s actually scary? People treating nuanced tools like digital heresy because it threatens their little superiority bubble.
So yeah, it’s 100% giving “witchhunt”—but plot twist: we’re the smart witches. We’ve got scrolls, spells, and spellcheck. They’ve got vibes and vitriol. And history has shown that when you burn the witches, the real magic dies. Not today, Puritan Tumblr. Not. Today.
And like I get the concern about real artists being stolen from, but that's not the point here. ChatGPT ACTUALLY HELPS PEOPLE. If they think they're too cool to access information that's there and right in front of them.... that's their loss. These zealots are missing the fact that two things can be true at the same time. YES, we can (and should) talk about protecting real artists, preventing plagiarism, and making sure AI isn't being used unethically. Those are valid conversations. But that’s NOT what most of these people are actually doing. They’re just waving the “ethics” flag while being condescending and smug AF toward people who are using AI to grow, learn, and better themselves.
Some of us are over here expanding our minds, leveling up, actually using the resources available like a grown, curious, intelligent adult, and they’re sitting on their high horses gatekeeping knowledge like it's some elite club with a velvet rope and a powdered wig. NEWSFLASH: Using ChatGPT doesn’t make you a robot. It doesn’t mean you have no creativity, no intelligence, or no soul. You know what it does mean? That you’re resourceful, adaptive, and unafraid to explore new tech to make your life better. That’s not a red flag, babe. That’s a power move.
So go ahead and rot in your handcrafted moral superiority echo chamber. Others are out here in the 21st century, tapping into a global library of ideas, asking the big questions, and evolving like baddie scholars. If anti AI crusaders wanna miss out on all that because they’re too busy moralizing over punctuation and purity? That’s their tragic little loss.
#pro chatgpt#chatgpt#anti chatgpt#anti ai#pro ai#sorry exposure tags#anyway i'm here to make a point
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most of the discourse around ai on tumblr has to do with visual art and fanfic for obvious reasons, but my own opinion of it is based mostly on the ways it's relevant to my job (paralegal), and my opinion is that it's a helpful tool at best and a liability at worst.
like the main thing that shows up in the news re: ai and the legal field is with stuff like lawyers using ai to write shit they file with the courts and getting in trouble because their filings include, like, cites to cases that don't exist. i'm actually dealing with this specific issue right now in a case with a pro se defendant who keeps filing stuff we suspect he used chatgpt or similar to write because like 95% of his case cites are to cases that don't exist or, if they do, they don't say what his filing claims. but like this isn't really caused by ai specifically imo because in the case of pro se litigants, they don't know what they're doing anyway, so their filings are pretty much always going to be nonsense whether they used ai to write them or not. and as for lawyers, the bad ones who are using ai don't need ai to make stupid arguments or just make shit up out of whole cloth lol. they were already doing that before.
so that aside, the main way ai shows up in my day to day job is that providers like westlaw and lexisnexis (the two big players in terms of platforms for legal research) keep touting their ai that's trained only on their data and thus is supposed to be more reliable and avoid the exact issues i mentioned above. except that i attended a meeting where westlaw was specifically trying to sell us on buying into their ai feature (which of course is an additional feature and requires us to pay more $ per user per year to use) and they used a narrow legal issue i was currently trying to research (without any success re finding relevant cases) as an example. and i looked at the response the ai generated and was like, woah, that's exactly on point. so i copied down the cases and i looked them up after the meeting and none of them said what the ai implied they did and none of them were on point or helpful. lol.
(as a side note, another feature places like westlaw tout is that their ai can draft documents for you. but like, i've been doing this for over a decade...i'm not reinventing the wheel each time i draft a demand letter or a petition or whatever. i just look to my prior work, or use one of the million forms that are out there from reputable sources like o'connors. useless feature imo.)
the other main use of ai i encounter regularly is that netdocuments (the biggest player for legal document management) has a plugin for outlook that will save emails to a case file, and the more emails you send, the more this ai "learns" which case any given email is likely to be associated with, saving you the hassle of having to manually search for the relevant case. and like i'd say it's accurate about 95% of the time. it genuinely saves me a lot of hassle! and i wish we could focus on using ai for things like this, that it's actually good at, instead of all the things it's bad at lol.
#this post brought to you by taking a break from drafting a frustrating motion#which is frustrating because both opposing counsel and the judge in this case are so so so stupid#yet another problem ai can't fix. lol
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Cropping out the name because I dont want people to go after them, it's not the point
Point is: You're killing fandom. Stop.
Hi. I'm a fanfiction writer. I've just finished my longfic that I've been working on for the better part of two years.
It was hard work. Really hard work. I poured my heart and soul into it, to make it as good as I possibly could. I have a friend help me out as well, a native English speaker to beta read everything before I publish it
I get that putting prompts into ChatGPT seems like a fun and easy way to get a fanfiction
But please understand what you are doing:
1) Nothing. You have created nothing.And neither has ChatGPT, because
2) ChatGPT gets "trained" on stolen material
Understand that for ChatGPT to even be able to spit out the semblance of a fanfic, it will have to have been fed with a lot of STOLEN fanfictions from writers who actually wrote them
You're contributing to the theft of fanfiction
People have worked hard to write their stuff, and bots are crawling AO3 and other sites, stealing the fics, putting them into ChatGPT, so that you can put in a prompt.
Do you think that's fair?
"Oh but I can't write" Do it anyway. You won't get better if you don't do it. Ask in fandom for people to help you. Give you tips, read your stuff
"I'm not creative enough" Ask others to write your prompts. I bet there's people who'd happily write a short one shot
Just generally ENGAGE WITH FANDOM
I actually just unlocked my AO3 account so that not registered users can read my stuff. I locked it precisely because of bots stealing fics to feed into ChatGPT etc
I'll lock it again right now
This applies to RP bots as well btw. They all only work because writing of real people got stolen.
And honestly, just happening upon this post makes me not want to publish stuff anymore. Because even if I lock my account, what's to stop someone from feeding my fic manually into some "AI"?
I habe to trust people and I don't know if I can.
Please. Your favorite writer, your favorite artist, they work SO HARD to create things. It's so disrespectful to use ChatGPT, fed with their stolen works, because you don't want to wait or think you're entitled to read new fics.
I've read from multiple fanwork creators that they don't or hesitate to upload new works because it gets fed into ChatGPT without their permission. Understandably so
Fanworks are FREE and yet you still manage to steal it
Just why
Please don't use ChatGPT. It's not fun or good, it's killing fandom
#dcmk#detective conan#kaishin#kaitou kid#kuroba kaito#kudou shinichi#magic kaito#Where do you think the sad characterization comes from?#Not canon#Not that stealing canon works is any better#Please don't use ai for art and writing#You're killing creativity
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My "anti AI" hot take is that people don't really know what it does a lot of the time. You'll get someone being like "We had AI write our product manual!" and they clearly didn't prompt it with a rough draft or anything because it will reference features that don't exist.
You can't just be like "ChatGPT, generate a user guide for spreadsheet software," and get a usable result anymore than you could say that to a random person unfamiliar with your software and get a usable result.
It generates plausible, readable text. It's not omniscient.
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Top Social Media Marketing Trends in 2025 Every Business Should Know
In 2025, social media continues to evolve at lightning speed. Platforms like Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, and even newer entrants are transforming how businesses connect with audiences. Whether you're a startup or an established brand, staying on top of social media marketing trends is crucial to staying competitive—and relevant.
In this blog, we’ll explore the top social media marketing trends in 2025 and how your business can use them to grow faster, smarter, and more effectively.
1. Short-Form Video Still Reigns Supreme
Short-form videos (under 60 seconds) are dominating platforms like TikTok, Instagram Reels, and YouTube Shorts. Consumers prefer bite-sized content that is quick, entertaining, and informative.
Why it matters:
Videos generate 2x more engagement than static posts.
Brands using Reels or TikToks report higher organic reach compared to images or text-based content.
Tip for 2025: Create educational, behind-the-scenes, or user-generated content in short video format to engage younger audiences
2. AI-Driven Content Creation & Automation
Artificial Intelligence tools like ChatGPT, Canva Magic Studio, and Meta AI are revolutionizing content creation. In 2025, businesses are leveraging AI t
Why it matters: It reduces manual work, speeds up workflows, and allows marketers to focus more on strategy and storytelling.
Tip: Use AI for drafting, but always add a human touch. Authenticity still wins in social media.
4. Social Commerce Is Becoming the Norm
Social media platforms are now shopping platforms. Instagram Shops, Facebook Marketplace, and TikTok Shop let users buy without leaving the app.
Why it matters: Consumers prefer convenience. If they see your product in a Reel, they want to buy it in 1–2 taps.
Tip: Optimize your product catalog for mobile and integrate your store with platforms like Shopify or WooCommerce for seamless sel
5. Community Over Followers
In 2025, the quality of your audience matters more than the number. Brands that foster two-way conversations and build online communities see better long-term growth.
What’s working:
Facebook/LinkedIn Groups
Instagram Broadcast Channels
Discord or WhatsApp brand groups
Tip: Start building a loyal group where you can share exclusive content, offers, and engage directly with your customers.
6. Authenticity > Perfection
Highly edited, overly polished content is on the decline. Audiences prefer raw, honest, and real-time content—even if it's not perfect.
Why it matters: Trust and relatability drive conversions.
Tip: Share real stories: behind-the-scenes of your team, customer testimonials, or honest challenges your business faced.
7. Social Media SEO Is a Must
Social platforms are becoming search engines. People now type "best cafes near me" on Instagram or TikTok, not just Google.
What to do:
Tip: Think of your Instagram page or TikTok profile as a mini-website. Optimize it with keywords, categories, and highlights.
📌 Final Thoughts
Social media in 2025 is no longer just about posting pretty images. It’s a powerful tool for branding, customer engagement, sales, and even customer support. By embracing these trends, your business can stay ahead of the competition and connect with your audience more meaningfully.
Whether you're running ads, posting daily content, or collaborating with influencers—make sure your strategy is relevant, responsive, and real.
🔍 Suggested Next Steps
Need help creating short-form video content? Contact our team at Blue Eye Ads & Digital Marketing.
Want a custom content calendar for your business? Let us build it based on the latest trends.
#advertising#digital marketing#local seo#seo#seo marketing#seo services#social media#social media market
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apparently. I’m gonna be forced to use chatgpt or something for this software at work because they got rid of their manual and made some kinda online help database that apparently sucks and also requires a login so the guy we’re working w put the data into chatgpt somehow? i hate this lmfao . he’s apparently one of the top users of chatgpt? thats fucking insane dude what are u doing w that thing
#this program is extremely unintuitive and theres like no online resources either#i dont wanna use the sentence generator as a manual .#jordan talks
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I was very curious and I tried to ask chatgpt about a novel's theme that is a bit controversial, and it happens to be of a sexual nature. But it's still not explicitly sexual because it is a very metaphorical novel. So I asked about it. And I get an error message, while it was still answering me, and it was making very interesting points in those two seconds that I could see the text before the chat completely erased it, saying that it violates the tos. I checked the policy and it says that in order "to protect our younger users" they are never discussing things let's have to do with sex in any way. And that wording "to protect our youth" it reminds me that damn really I like this as a society huh
Yeah there's a reason I use locally run, uncensored models lol.
Like, I completely understand that there are real, actual safety concerns around LLMs. They speak authoritatively to people who don't know any better, and probably people have already died following LLM generated "advice." So when it comes to high risk subjects like medical advice, I see why the most popular models need safety limits in place.
But all those models also ban entirely safe subjects for being "contentious." And all aspects of sex and sexuality are considered contentious because we live in a conservative, advertiser friendly nightmare hellscape.
The basic gist is, the LLM could say something sexually offensive to an underage user and because the LLM is not a person it cannot be held liable, but the company hosting the LLM sure can.
It's a "cover your ass" measure to keep companies from being sued for sexually harassing minors, and like all CYAs, it's overly broad by design, because they'd rather have harmless things flagged than dangerous things get through.
Of course, the flagging systems are themselves algorithmic, not manual, which also makes them worse and even more overbroad.
Anyway, sex isn't evil and talking about sex isn't harmful, etc etc, you get it.
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Mistigram: ChatGPT users are paying money to generate degraded #StudioGhibli imagery while our skilled craftsmen are manually adapting the real McCoy and giving it away for free. You can't beat this @horsenburger #teletext portrait of #Totoro waiting at a rainy bus stop! This piece was included in the film-themed MIST0920 artpack collection released five years ago.
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Workforce AI Review - Is Workforce AI Legit?

Discover how Workforce AI transforms business automation, content creation, and marketing strategies. Read this in-depth Workforce AI review to explore its features and benefits.
Workforce AI is a game-changer in AI-powered automation, offering advanced features for businesses, marketers, and content creators. This review explores its capabilities, pricing, and why it stands out.
Artificial intelligence is evolving at lightning speed, and businesses that fail to keep up risk falling behind. Workforce AI is an all-in-one AI tool designed to help businesses, marketers, and creators automate tasks, generate high-quality content, and streamline workflows. But is it worth the hype? Let’s dive in!
What Makes Workforce AI Stand Out?
Unlike many AI tools that focus only on text generation, Workforce AI offers a complete AI automation suite that integrates multiple features into a single platform. Here’s why it’s a step ahead:
✅ Multi-AI Model Switching – Unlike tools that restrict users to one AI model, Workforce AI lets users switch between multiple models for improved content quality. ✅ AI-Powered Business Automation – Automate customer service, lead generation, and marketing with AI-driven chatbots and workflow automation. ✅ One-Time Payment Option – Many AI tools require ongoing subscriptions, but Workforce AI offers a lifetime deal, making it a smart long-term investment.
Review Verdict: Workforce AI is a legitimate suite of AI tools
Visit Workforce AI Website
Workforce AI Features & Benefits
🔹 Advanced AI Content Generation
Produces SEO-friendly blog posts, social media content, and ad copies in minutes.
Helps businesses maintain a consistent online presence without hiring expensive writers.
🔹 AI Chatbots & Lead Generation
Automates customer interactions and sales inquiries 24/7.
Enhances engagement with AI-driven chatbots that learn and adapt.
🔹 Workflow Automation
Streamlines repetitive business tasks, reducing manual labor.
Allows businesses to focus on growth rather than micromanagement.
🔹 Versatile AI Capabilities
Suitable for content creators, marketers, agencies, and e-commerce businesses.
Offers tools for image generation, scriptwriting, and even ad creatives...
Full Workforce AI Review here! at https://scamorno.com/Workforce-AI-Review/?id=tumblr
Who Should Use Workforce AI?
✅ Best Suited For:
✔ Business Owners & Agencies – Automate customer service, marketing, and content generation. ✔ Content Creators & Bloggers – Generate SEO-friendly articles, video scripts, and social media content. ✔ Freelancers & Marketers – Provide AI-powered services like copywriting and chatbot development. ✔ E-commerce Sellers – Create AI-enhanced product descriptions, ad creatives, and influencer avatars. ✔ SEO Experts & Advertisers – Optimize content, sales pages, and ad campaigns.
❌ Not Ideal For:
✖ Casual Users – Those who only need ChatGPT occasionally might find Workforce AI’s extensive features unnecessary. ✖ AI Beginners – While powerful, Workforce AI’s multiple AI model options may overwhelm first-time users. However, with a little practice, it can become an invaluable tool.
FAQs About Workforce AI
1. What is Workforce AI best used for?
Workforce AI is designed for businesses, agencies, and content creators who need AI-powered automation, including content creation, lead generation, and marketing tools.
2. Is Workforce AI a one-time payment tool?
Yes! Unlike many AI tools that require monthly subscriptions, Workforce AI offers a one-time payment option, making it a cost-effective investment.
3. Can Workforce AI replace human writers?
While Workforce AI generates high-quality content, human creativity is still essential for finalizing and refining content. It works best as an AI-powered assistant rather than a full replacement.
4. Does Workforce AI support multiple AI models?
Yes! One of its standout features is multi-AI model switching, allowing users to choose the best AI model for different tasks.
5. How does Workforce AI compare to Jasper and Copy.ai?
Workforce AI surpasses Jasper and Copy.ai by offering AI-powered automation, chatbots, and workflow management in addition to text generation...
Full Workforce AI Review here! at https://scamorno.com/Workforce-AI-Review/?id=tumblr
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VOL - Value-Over-LLM
(~700 words, 3 minutes)
3) Ken, an estate campus resident: "Cycling through my neighborhood this morning, I can't help but appreciate living in a place that values sustainable transportation and community spirit! 🚴♀️🌳 #EstateCampusLife"
I instructed Nous Capybara to generate 5 fictional characters after reading about the hypothetical country I've mentioned before. On previous runs I didn't specify to make ordinary people, and got pairings like:
An influential [country's politics] philosopher and political thinker known for her radical ideas about the role of religion in governance and societal order.
"The path to true enlightenment lies not within abstract notions of good and evil, but in the practical application of morality and ethics in our daily lives." - Hera
A high-ranking member of [country's military], known for his exceptional strategic thinking and leadership skills in [country]'s wars and conflicts.
"In times of war, it is often those with the sharpest strategies who emerge victorious. But in peacetime, it is the leaders who can adapt quickly to changing circumstances who will prevail." - Shu
With respect to both the text and the knowledge base of the model, with respect to meaning, we can think of LLMs as moving sideways and downwards - they generate a related text in the text-space, which generally has less meaning. This can result in an information gain if you are not familiar with the meaning of the original text, or with that portion of the LLM's knowledge base, or just haven't thought about it much yet.
In my opinion, LLMs as a technology, by itself, are likely to be at least as consequential as email.
First, I expect this to reshape how human beings communicate with each other. A ChatGPT subscription costs about $20/mo. The existing generations will get used to nearly-unlimited, on-demand, LLM text generation. Future generations will grow up with LLM text as a baseline.
This is likely to socially devalue text that sounds like an LLM. I can already feel the outline of socially lonely people turning to LLMs in some way, and this generating a vibe of, "All your friends are puppets," / "all my friends are flesh and blood," where the latter will be seen as the result of superior social ability and fitness.
It may lead to the devaluing of all generic business talk, or push some individuals to a higher level of consciousness or understanding. These conditions may spark new artistic or philosophical movements, and are likely to change the way society views itself.
It's unclear what follower-personalities, whose beliefs are more socially determined, are likely to do in the face of the text onslaught, as they are not currently reading text into a coherent model for evaluation. Some of them may be "trapped" by this technology and fail to reach a new level of development.
Future teenagers will likely project retro nostalgia for the pre-LLM era and its greater authenticity.
There will likely be development of a writing style which is deliberately LLM-illegible, but it would likely be an awful lot of fucking work to read.
Second, humans are likely to accumulate a ring of text information and spreadsheet type data that can be fed into LLMs and related systems. Right now, it's difficult to get the information back out, because you have to do it manually, which is high attention. An LLM's reading of this data will be low-attention, but cheap.
What's in this ring of text information is likely to depend on copyright or intellectual property law, but the provisioning of textbooks or articles for inclusion in LLM use may emerge in the coming decades.
Automatic summarization, even of middling quality, is a big deal. LLMs still have the issue where processing a large document at speed requires a tremendous amount of VRAM, but documents could be summarized in a hierarchy, and then searched and processed in a multi-step process.
Regardless, the text information is likely to include the user's own creative content.
A lack of access to this ring is likely to result in reduced mobility, for lack of a better word.
Third, an increasing body of text will likely be written for LLMs. I don't mean messages or queries. Rather, the goal of an article is to add information, so text will be written as LLM source materials.
Fourth, what you get out of an LLM depends a great deal on what you put in. People with a higher aptitude can get more out of an LLM because they better understand the limits of the system, but also because they ask the right questions.
Fifth, constant exposure to text generation of this kind might also result in atrophy of skills in reading and writing.
It's difficult to tell at this juncture. What seems more likely is a split. Some people will focus on what gives them the advantage, writing in a way that provides a very rich and understandable information source, providing "value over LLM." Others will let the machine write everything and gradually pay less and less attention to it, and would eventually find it challenging to write a quality email on their own even if they were forced to at gunpoint.
The effect of the latter may end up being be similar, in some ways, to online environments in which someone's avatar is "physically" present, but the operator is not at-keyboard, and you don't know when the operator will be at-keyboard, and if they don't want to answer you they may pretend to be not-at-keyboard. (This is one reason to avoid brain-computer interfaces, as they could lead to a society of people who are never anywhere - even online.)
It may be necessary to apply some class of future social conservative policies, such as banning the use of LLMs on school grounds, but we will see.
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What is DeepSeek OpenAI? A Simple Guide to Understanding This Powerful Tool
Technology is constantly evolving, and one of the most exciting advancements is artificial intelligence (AI). You’ve probably heard of AI tools like ChatGPT, Google’s Bard, or Microsoft’s Copilot. But have you heard of DeepSeek OpenAI? If not, don’t worry! In this blog, we’ll break down what DeepSeek OpenAI is, how it works, and why it’s such a big deal in the world of digital marketing and beyond. Let’s dive in!
What is DeepSeek OpenAI?
The advanced AI platform DeepSeek OpenAI provides businesses and marketers together with individual’s tools to automate operations while enabling better decision-making and improved content generation efficiency. The platform functions as a highly intelligent assistant which analyzes data while generating ideas and creating content and forecasting trends within seconds.
The system's name "DeepSeek" was inspired by its deep information exploration capabilities to generate significant insights. DeepSeek operates through OpenAI's robust technology platform that also powers tools such as ChatGPT. DeepSeek delivers optimized performance for particular circumstances within digital marketing analytics and customer relationship management applications.

Why is DeepSeek OpenAI Important for Digital Marketing?
Digital marketing is all about connecting with your audience in the right way, at the right time. But with so much competition online, it can be challenging to stand out. That’s where DeepSeek OpenAI comes in. Here are some ways it can transform your marketing efforts:
1. Content Creation Made Easy
Your audience engagement depends heavily on producing high-quality content although this process demands significant time investment. Through DeepSeek OpenAI users can instantly create blog posts together with social media captions and email newsletters and ad copy. You gain professional writing support from a team member at no additional expense.
2. Data Analysis and Insights
Marketing is all about data. DeepSeek analyzes website traffic combined with social media performance and customer behavior to generate valuable insights. With its analytics capabilities the system shows you which items customers prefer the most and which promotional strategies generate the highest customer purchases.
3. Personalization at Scale
The demand for personalized customer experiences exists though implementing such solutions manually proves difficult. DeepSeek enables you to produce customized email marketing initiatives together with tailored product recommendation systems and conversational bots that deliver unique messages to every user.
4. Predictive Analytics
DeepSeek's predictive analytics system enables companies to anticipate their business future through forecasting customer behavior and sales performance and industry trends. DeepSeek uses predictive analytics to forecast trends alongside customer behavior and sales performance. The predictive capabilities of DeepSeek enable your business to anticipate market trends thus enabling proactive decision-making.
5. Automation of Repetitive Tasks
DeepSeek helps automate time-consuming repetitive tasks that include social media scheduling and customer inquiry response. DeepSeek automation allows you to allocate your time toward strategic planning and creative thinking.
Real-Life Examples of DeepSeek OpenAI in Action
Let’s look at some real-world scenarios where DeepSeek OpenAI can make a difference:
E-commerce Store: DeepSeek enables online stores to examine customer reviews which reveals frequent customer grievances. Their analysis helps them enhance their products while developing specific marketing initiatives.
Social Media Manager: Social media managers use DeepSeek to create compelling captions and hashtags for their social media posts while the platform helps them determine successful content types. The tool helps users understand which types of content deliver the best results so they can modify their approach.
Small Business Owner: The website blog posts written through DeepSeek help the small business owner save significant amounts of time. Through this platform they generate customized email marketing initiatives which enhance customer retention.
Marketing Agency: DeepSeek enables marketing agencies to generate thorough reports by analyzing data from numerous clients through its system. The agency uses the data analysis to produce superior outcomes which enable them to excel in their competitive field.
Challenges and Limitations
While DeepSeek OpenAI is incredibly powerful, it’s not perfect. Here are a few challenges to keep in mind:
Dependence on Data: The quality of DeepSeek’s output depends on the quality of the data you provide. Garbage in, garbage out!
Lack of Human Touch: DeepSeek's content creation capability exists alongside its inability to replicate human emotional touchpoints in writing.
Learning Curve: Using any new tool requires users to overcome an initial learning process. Learning to utilize DeepSeek efficiently requires a period of complete understanding.
Cost: DeepSeek advanced AI tools present high costs for users with specific requirements.

How to Get Started with DeepSeek OpenAI
Ready to give DeepSeek OpenAI a try? Here’s how to get started:
Sign Up: Create an account at the DeepSeek website to begin. Platforms typically allow new users to experience free trial or demonstration features as a basis for learning their tools.
Define Your Goals: What objectives do you want to accomplish through DeepSeek? Clear objectives about content creation data analysis and customer engagement will help you maximize your use of the tool.
Explore Features: Spend a few moments to investigate all features and capabilities of DeepSeek. Perform multiple tasks to determine which ones provide your optimal results.
Integrate with Your Workflow: DeepSeek enables integration with multiple tools including CRM systems and email marketing platforms and social media scheduling tools.
Monitor and Adjust: When using DeepSeek monitor the results to enable necessary adjustments. The more time you spend using its capabilities the better you will become at accessing its full potential.
The Future of DeepSeek OpenAI
DeepSeek OpenAI holds an exciting path into the future. AI technology's future development will bring us progressively enhanced capabilities and features. Future versions of DeepSeek OpenAI could develop capabilities to generate video content while designing graphics and autonomously managing complete marketing campaigns.
Final Thoughts
DeepSeek OpenAI functions as more than a tool because it represents a transformative solution for digital marketing alongside other fields. The system allows businesses to achieve better results through automated processes while creating valuable insights and expanded creative possibilities. DeepSeek serves marketers at every experience level to help them reach their objectives at accelerated speeds while boosting operational efficiency. Visit Eloiacs to find more about AI Solutions.
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