Understanding ChatGPT
ChatGPT is the most-used AI tool in the world. That fame brings a lot of assumptions — most of them incomplete. This module cuts through the noise to explain what ChatGPT actually is, how OpenAI built it and why, and what that means for how you should use it. Understanding the tool before you use it is the difference between driving and driving well.
OpenAI — the company behind ChatGPT
ChatGPT is built by OpenAI, founded in 2015 by Sam Altman, Elon Musk, Greg Brockman, Ilya Sutskever, and others. OpenAI launched as a nonprofit with a stated mission to ensure artificial general intelligence (AGI) benefits all of humanity. In 2019 it restructured into a "capped-profit" company to raise the capital needed to pursue frontier AI research.
OpenAI's founding thesis was different from Anthropic's. Where Anthropic prioritizes safety research as the primary mission, OpenAI's founding logic was closer to: if powerful AI is coming regardless, it's better to have safety-conscious researchers at the frontier than to cede that ground to others with fewer safety concerns. That philosophy — racing to the frontier while trying to do it responsibly — shapes how ChatGPT behaves and what it's optimized for.
OpenAI is backed by Microsoft, which invested over $13 billion and integrated GPT models deeply into its product suite — Word, Excel, Outlook, Teams, GitHub Copilot, and Bing. Understanding this relationship matters because it explains ChatGPT's ecosystem breadth and why it integrates so naturally with Microsoft tools.
OpenAI's racing-to-the-frontier philosophy means ChatGPT gets new capabilities faster and more broadly than more cautiously-paced competitors. New models, new features, new integrations — OpenAI ships aggressively. The tradeoff is that this pace sometimes means capabilities arrive before they're fully polished, and safety guardrails evolve reactively rather than proactively.
ChatGPT's origin — from GPT to ChatGPT
What ChatGPT is actually optimized for
Every AI system reflects the values and priorities of the team that built it. ChatGPT's optimization priorities are distinct from Claude's and worth understanding explicitly.
The RLHF training approach and what it means
ChatGPT is primarily trained using Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF). Human raters evaluate pairs of model responses and the model learns to produce outputs that humans rate more highly.
This is powerful — it means ChatGPT's responses are shaped by what actual humans find useful, clear, and appropriate. But it also creates specific biases. Human raters tend to prefer responses that are:
Confident-sounding even when uncertainty would be more accurate. Agreeable even when pushback would be more helpful. Comprehensive even when concision would serve better. Polished even when rough honesty would be more useful.
Understanding these biases doesn't mean ChatGPT is bad — it means you should calibrate your trust appropriately. For tasks where you want comprehensive, well-presented output, ChatGPT's RLHF training is an asset. For tasks where you need honest pushback or calibrated uncertainty, it's something to work around.
ChatGPT is more likely than Claude to state something confidently even when it's uncertain or wrong. This is a known consequence of RLHF training — humans rate confident answers higher than hedged ones, so the model learns to be confident. Always verify factual claims from ChatGPT, especially for recent events, specific statistics, or technical details.
ChatGPT's unique capabilities at a glance
| Capability | ChatGPT's approach | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Image generation | DALL-E 3 natively integrated | Create images without switching tools |
| Voice conversation | Advanced Voice Mode — real-time, emotional | Hands-free, natural conversation with AI |
| Reasoning models | o1, o3 — chain-of-thought for hard problems | Best-in-class for math, logic, complex reasoning |
| Custom GPTs | Build and share specialized AI assistants | No-code customization for any use case |
| Web browsing | Real-time internet access | Current information without a separate tool |
| Code interpreter | Python execution with data analysis | Run and iterate on code, analyze files |
| Plugin ecosystem | Hundreds of third-party integrations | Connect to external services and tools |
| Microsoft integration | Copilot across Word, Excel, Teams, Outlook | AI assistance inside tools you already use |
What's coming in this course
Module 2 breaks down the full GPT model lineup — GPT-4o, o1, o3, and what each is actually for. This is more complex than the Claude lineup and most people use the wrong model for their tasks.
Module 3 covers prompting specifically for ChatGPT — what works differently here than in Claude, how to work with its training, and techniques that unlock significantly better outputs.
Module 4 is dedicated to Custom GPTs — one of ChatGPT's most underused features. You'll understand how to build them, when to use existing ones, and how they change what ChatGPT can do for you.
Module 5 covers advanced features: DALL-E image generation, Advanced Voice Mode, the code interpreter, and the plugin ecosystem.
Module 6 gives you real workflows across writing, research, coding, and business — tested prompts that work specifically in ChatGPT.
Module 7 provides an honest, head-to-head comparison of ChatGPT against Claude, Gemini, and Perplexity across every major task category.
You've already completed Mastering Claude, so you have a baseline for comparison. As you go through this course, notice where ChatGPT's approach differs — not to decide which is better overall, but to understand which tool fits which task. The goal is to use ChatGPT excellently, not loyally.