The wildly popular ChatGPT debuted in late November and is free for users. It generates sophisticated, human-like responses based on requests from users and mountains of data, including from legal texts.
1. ChatGPT passes law school exams
"Alone, ChatGPT would be pretty mediocre law student," said lead study author Jonathan Choi, who collaborated with professors Kristin Hickman, Amy Monahan and Daniel Schwarcz.
"The bigger potential for the profession here is that a lawyer could use ChatGPT to produce a rough first draft and just make their practice that much more effective," he said.
Choi said he and many colleagues have now banned Internet use during in-class exams to eliminate the possibility of cheating with ChatGPT, though future exams may test their ability to effectively leverage artificial intelligence programs.
2. Chat GPT Explained in 5 Minutes (Simplilearn)
3. A Crash Course on Chat GPT (Adrian Twarog)
4. Top 10 AI Tools Like ChatGPT You Must Try in 2023 (Adrian Twarog)
00:07 - MidJourney AI Art
01:24 - Adobe Podcast AI Voice
02:18 - Nvidia Broadcast - AI Video Geforce
03:10 - Codedamn - With ChatGPT Support
04:19 - Descript - AI Video
05:12 - Notion AI - AI Text Generation
06:26 - Synthesia - AI Avatar
07:00 - Resemble AI - Voice AI
07:39 - Soundraw AI - AI Music and Sound
08:13 - Futurepedia - AI Tools Database
5. Using AI to write and illustrate a children's book in one weekend
Ammaar Reshi was reading a bedtime story to his friend's daughter when he decided he wanted to write his own.
- In December he used OpenAI's new chatbot, ChatGPT, to write "Alice and Sparkle," a story about a girl named Alice who wants to learn about the world of tech, and her robot friend, Sparkle.
- He then used Midjourney, an AI art generator, to illustrate it.
Just 72 hours later, Reshi self-published his book on Amazon's digital bookstore. The following day, he had the paperback in his hands, made for free via another Amazon service called KDP.
He said he paid nothing to create and publish the book, though he was already paying for a $30-a-month Midjourney subscription.
Impressed with the speed and results of his project, Reshi shared the experience in a Twitter thread that attracted more than 2,000 comments and 5,800 retweets.
Reshi said he initially received positive feedback from users praising his creativity. But the next day, the responses were filled with vitriol.
5 plagiarism detection tools to tell if content is written by a bot like ChatGPT
SINGAPORE - Students love it, but it is the nightmare of teachers. ChatGPT, an artificial intelligence (AI) chatbot, has been thrust into the spotlight since its latest version was released in November 2022.
The chatbot, developed by well-funded United States start-up OpenAI, is able to generate coherent essays and solve word-based maths problems.
The race to beat AI-assisted plagiarism and cheating is on. The Straits Times looks at five plagiarism detection tools.
1. GPTZero
https://gptzero.me/
2. GLTR (Giant Language Model Test Room)
http://gltr.io/dist/index.html
3. GPT-2 Output Detector
https://openai-openai-detector.hf.space/)
4. Watermarking (coming soon)
https://scottaaronson.blog/?p=6823
5. Turnitin Originality for ChatGPT (coming soon)
(https://www.straitstimes.com/tech/tech-news/5-plagiarism-detection-tools-to-tell-if-content-is-written-by-a-bot-like-chatgpt)