ChatGPT Took 30 Seconds to Make a $600 Article Per a Freelance Writer: AI 'Is Going to Take My Job'
Per Business Insider
A freelance writer decided to test out ChatGPT and its ability to write articles and found that the tool could create a $ 600 article in just 30 seconds. The writer then shared his sentiments regarding the ability of the artificial intelligence tool.
Henry Williams, a freelance writer, decided to use ChatGPT to test whether it could write a convincing article. The writer found out that despite the final output needing some editing, the article was worth £500 or a little over $600.
Williams: "I'm pretty sure artificial intelligence is going to take my job,"
However, the freelance writer noted that the AI had some mistakes and still had an inhuman tone. However, certain elements of the article were still spot on.
Here are the points that Williams found that ChatGPT was able to nail successfully:
- Key points
- Grammar
- Syntax
Williams also shared his opinion with The Guardian highlighting how writers and editors would still be needed.
Williams: "(writers and editors) will still be needed, but fewer of them. A human will prompt AI to generate mountains of copy, only intervening again to fact-check, amend and approve."
ChatGPT has been making headlines for different feats it was able to accomplish. An example of this is passing the Wharton MBA exams, which were tested by a professor who gave the AI tool a score of B- and B.
The tool grew to over 1 million users shortly after it launched, and despite its success, the tool has started to raise eyebrows. One major issue is plagiarism, which the CEO of ChatGPT decided to address.
Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT, gave a statement regarding how they would deal with plagiarism, which is a huge concern in the Academics sector. The CEO shared how they are already working on dealing with this issue.
Altman: "There may be ways we can help teachers be a little more likely to detect output of a GPT-like system. But honestly, a determined person will get around them."
See flow at unusualwhales.com/flow.
Other News:
- OpenAI's ChatGPT Passes Wharton's MBA Exam in Professor's Experiment
- CEO of ChatGPT maker responds to schools' plagiarism concerns: 'We adapted to calculators and changed what we tested in math class'
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