marketrent OP t1_j5z05ci wrote
Reply to comment by kilkonie in ChatGPT can’t be credited as an author, says world’s largest academic publisher (26 Jan. 2023) by marketrent
>kilkonie
>That means it's not plagiarism when I use its work as it's not an author. Nice!
Did you read the linked content? From it:
>AI writing software can amplify social biases like sexism and racism and has a tendency to produce “plausible bullshit” — incorrect information presented as fact. (See, for example, CNET’s recent use of AI tools to write articles. The publication later found errors in more than half of those published.)
kilkonie t1_j5z1gcf wrote
Of course. As a human that interacts with a limited set of like-minded people, my own writing has the potential to amplify social biases like sexism and racism that aligns to my own bubble of friends. I also have a tendency to produce “plausible bullshit” — incorrect information presented as fact. (See, for example, most of my high school papers.)
My point was that if I can't cite the output of ChatGPT as the actual author of the content, then I simply must take it upon myself to deal with the repercussions of publishing crap work, wherever it came from.
sesor33 t1_j5zmzue wrote
Remember, Reddit doesn't read, and it looks like Reddit doesn't want to write either. You literally have people in threads begging for a computer to think FOR them. I say this as someone who works with computers and has worked with ML before.
quantumfucker t1_j62vf6i wrote
This has nothing to do with plagiarism though, which is what the comment is talking about.
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