CALIFORNIA: The viral ChatGPT chatbot may be smart enough to generate answers to pass prestigious graduate-level examinations in the United States – although not with high marks – but it has raised fears that students will outsource their learning to artificial intelligence.
The results have been so impressive that some educators have warned that it could lead to cheating and even change traditional classroom teaching methods. “I think we're looking at something like when Google became this amazing search engine that appeared on the landscape. It sort of changed how we engaged with the Internet,” said Dr Victor Lee, associate professor at Stanford University’s Graduate School of Education.
A new app developed by a Princeton University student that attempts to detect ChatGPT was downloaded 30,000 times in the first week.