ChatGPT — time to ask right questions

Published date03 February 2023
Publication titleOtago Daily Times: Web Edition Articles (New Zealand)
It's potentially a game changer for the education sector and a lot of other sectors too. But my own experience with this latest AI tool left me suspecting we have bigger things to worry about

If you have missed the buzz around ChatGPT, it is a computer application that uses artificial intelligence to generate content on demand.

it is owned by OpenAI, the tech giant who also brought us Dall-E, which generates pictures, and Jukebox, which does the same for music.

In the case of ChatGPT, what it creates is text.

Generative models like ChatGPT do not just find things other people have already written, like the results of a Google search. They generate new content.

If I wanted 1000 words on why the Otago Daily Times is the best newspaper in the southern hemisphere, I would type in that request and, in a second or two, GPT would come up with something that has never been written before.

In this case, GPT tells me it is due to ''its unwavering commitment to quality journalism and its passion for keeping readers informed''. Who could argue with that?

When I flipped that question around and asked why the ODT is the worst paper in the southern hemisphere, GPT informed me it is because ''it is often filled with opinion pieces that lack any facts or evidence''. So yeah, ahem, safe to say it is not perfect yet.

You can have fun with GPT. Want to rewrite your washing machine instructions in the style of a Lee Childs thriller? GPT will deliver.

But you can probably imagine why universities are a bit worried about this.

Just this week, ChatGPT passed law exams at Minnesota University Law School. It did not exactly ace them, as it was graded at C+. But for desperate, failing or just plain lazy students, you can see the attraction.

Of course, student dishonesty is not a new concern. AI technology has so far been on the side of the good guys, with plagiarism detectors like TurnItIn helping spot answers copied verbatim from other sources.

GPT technology will not trigger plagiarism detectors, though, because it is not plagiarism. This would be new writing ... just not the student's own.

Whether the original human authors will be due a cut if an AI trained on their work ever writes a bestseller will be one for the courts and the law exams of the future.

Last year, I gave a demonstration of GPT-3 (a younger sibling of ChatGPT) to an Otago undergraduate law class. I fed it an old exam question and we all looked on as it churned out a pretty solid answer.

Looking out at that sea...

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