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Birgitte Rasine's avatar

A real-life anecdote to back up what Gary has outlined: a few months ago, I was interviewed by a global organization that needed help with their technical documentation (communicating the importance of a specific set of green technologies to a wider, non technical audience). This organization has over 50,000 members all over the world, and the work they do directly impacts the built environment.

The first question they asked me was, "How do you feel about using ChatGPT in your work (as a writer/editor)?"

Note the open-ended nature of the question. They weren't making a value judgment. The question didn't lead—they didn't ask "Do you use ChatGPT in your work"

I said, simply and immediately, "I refuse." And then qualified it with many of the points Gary, I myself, and many others have been making about the reliability of generative AI.

There was a beat of silence as the three people on the call looked at each other. Then they broke into applause. (And hired me a few weeks later)

I have never received actual applause in an interview.

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Perry C. Douglas's avatar

This says it all: “OpenAI painted a false dichotomy. The choice is not between them building AI or not, it is between them building AI for free.” With all the hype and fascination OpenAI was never properly evaluated on basic business fundamentals.

Gary, the more you write and with knowledge of the last 1000 years of business and technology. OpenAI is incredibly comparable to the dot.com era crash and burn. Technology and times may change but human greed and stupidity doesn’t.

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