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by seba_dos1
1101 days ago
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Of course. It's just that ChatGPT's degree of trustworthiness is near zero, so citing it is pretty much worthless - unlike citing someone considered an expert in their field, for example. It may still be a very useful tool, but not when used this way. |
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There are many categories and types of questions where you can have a good degree of confidence in the answer. This is especially true for questions where a rough approximation is acceptable.
Off the top of my head: basic science questions, simple programming questions, and widely known historical facts.
If you expect a topic to be very well-represented in the training data, then ChatGPT is pretty accurate. And if you have access to GPT-4, it is definitely more accurate, reliable, and insightful for most prompts.
I prefer using it on questions like this for a few reasons. I find the experience to be so much smoother and more pleasant. The ChatGPT UI is incredibly minimal and clean. And then it allows asking follow-up questions, which is very useful.
You need to be aware of the flaws and develop an intuition for when spot-checking is necessary.
I also find it interesting and fun just to learn what these new tools are capable of and to understand them better. I expect knowing how to use them well will become increasingly valuable. Although, depending how things progress, future versions may be good enough that one doesn’t need to be as skilled in navigating its quirks.