Skip to main content

ChatGPT may have helped someone win the lottery. Could it be true?

A man from Thailand claims that he has used ChatGPT to generate numbers that helped him win the lottery.

Patthawikorn Boonrin recently went viral after sharing details on TikTok, of how he used the AI chatbot developed by OpenAI to generate numbers that he in turn used to play the lottery and win. His strategy includes inputting some hypothetical questions as well as some prior winning numbers as a ChatGPT query, according to Mashable.

Recommended Videos

The winning numbers for Boonrin’s draw were 57, 27, 29, and 99, and he won 2,000 Thai Baht (US$59). While the prize was not large, he told a local publication that he has used this strategy to generate lottery numbers in the past. He added that ChatGPT told him not to get “too obsessed” with the method, noting that winning the lottery was a matter of luck, and also suggested that he should go out and get some exercise.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Boonrin plans to share more about his experience using ChatGPT to generate lottery numbers on TikTok. Surely, he will garner even more attention if he scores another, even greater win. However, that might introduce lottery companies into the ongoing conversation surrounding the ethics of ChatGPT.

There have been several opinions about the ethics of and issues with ChatGPT since its inception in November 2022. Institutions such as colleges and universities have banned the use of the AI chatbot, under the premise that it could ramp up plagiarism and cheating on campuses. Meanwhile, several industries including journalism, communications, art, and technology, among others have embraced the service.

However, the implementation hasn’t been without folly. Publications using AI to quietly generate articles have been found publishing pieces with inaccurate information, artwork that is supposed to be human-like is missing limbs and digits, and the GPT language model used by other companies has gone rogue when pushed out to the public.

There’s no telling what issues could arise if more people attempt to use ChatGPT as a method to generate lottery numbers, especially if people want the ego boost of sharing online how they earned their winnings.

Fionna Agomuoh
Fionna Agomuoh is a Computing Writer at Digital Trends. She covers a range of topics in the computing space, including…
ChatGPT’s latest model may be a regression in performance
chatGPT on a phone on an encyclopedia

According to a new report from Artificial Analysis, OpenAI's flagship large language model for ChatGPT, GPT-4o, has significantly regressed in recent weeks, putting the state-of-the-art model's performance on par with the far smaller, and notably less capable, GPT-4o-mini model.

This analysis comes less than 24 hours after the company announced an upgrade for the GPT-4o model. "The model’s creative writing ability has leveled up–more natural, engaging, and tailored writing to improve relevance & readability," OpenAI wrote on X. "It’s also better at working with uploaded files, providing deeper insights & more thorough responses." Whether those claims continue to hold up is now being cast in doubt.

Read more
ChatGPT just improved its creative writing chops
a phone displaying the ChatGPT homepage on a beige bbackground.

One of the great strengths of ChatGPT is its ability to aid in creative writing. ChatGPT's latest large language model, GPT-4o, has received a bit of a performance boost, OpenAI announced Wednesday. Users can reportedly expect "more natural, engaging, and tailored writing to improve relevance & readability" moving forward.

https://twitter.com/OpenAI/status/1859296125947347164

Read more
ChatGPT already listens and speaks. Soon it may see as well
ChatGPT meets a dog

ChatGPT's Advanced Voice Mode, which allows users to converse with the chatbot in real time, could soon gain the gift of sight, according to code discovered in the platform's latest beta build. While OpenAI has not yet confirmed the specific release of the new feature, code in the ChatGPT v1.2024.317 beta build spotted by Android Authority suggests that the so-called "live camera" could be imminently forthcoming.

OpenAI had first shown off Advanced Voice Mode's vision capabilities for ChatGPT in May, when the feature was first launched in alpha. During a demo posted at the time, the system was able to identify that it was looking at a dog through the phone's camera feed, identify the dog based on past interactions, recognize the dog's ball, and associate the dog's relationship to the ball (i.e. playing fetch).

Read more