One of the most prominent issues that has arisen regarding AI and the daily use of chatbots is that of reliability. Are AI chatbots providing us with information we should trust? How do we know whether or not their information is reliable?
Somewhat disconcertingly, Sam Altman, CEO of OpenAI, has asserted, in no uncertain terms, that there may be a little too much trust being put into AI chatbots, including ChatGPT.
In Altman鈥檚 words, 鈥減eople trust ChatGPT a little too much.鈥
Coming from an AI industry听leader himself, there鈥檚 no surprise that this statement, as well as the broader conversation itself, has led to a few raised eyebrows. If we were already a little worried about the reliability of AI, is this an indication that it鈥檚 not just a valid concern, it may be an actual issue? Is AI completely unreliable?
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A Whole Lot of Nothing
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As much as Altman has become known for making the odd controversial statement and stirring the pot here and there, this particular situation seems to have been blown a little out of proportion.
AI news is always flooded with panic and concern surrounding trust, reliability and larger existential questions and worries, and to be perfectly frank, these comments made by Altman on OpenAI鈥檚 new and recently released podcast are nothing new. He鈥檚 not making breaking news or telling us something we didn鈥檛 already know. In fact, this is something both he and experts have been saying from the get go.
Trust has just become a bit of a buzzword in the AI sphere, but the idea of AIs hallucinating and providing inaccurate information is old news. It鈥檚 not something that鈥檚 been hidden by experts or industry professionals, so why are people surprised now that Altman is simply emphasising one of the faults of AI technology?
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We鈥檒l say it exactly as it is 鈥 a whole lot of panic over nothing new. And even though Sam has done his fair share of poking the bear, so to speak, this isn鈥檛 one of those times.
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So, Do We Put Too Much Trust In ChatGPT?
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Now, just because this isn鈥檛 breaking news doesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檚 not an issue that we should be aware of 鈥 in fact, the fact that Altman and other experts are constantly raising the issue is actually more of an indication that we鈥檙e not taking it seriously enough.
Yes, the technology is incredible and it has the ability to do a lot more than we could possible have dreamed of in the past. And, the content that it produces sounds professional and very believable. However, just because it sounds good doesn鈥檛 mean that it鈥檚 actually accurate or should be trusted. We鈥檙e well aware the AI hallucinates and the issue with hallucinations is that it鈥檚 incredibly difficult to tell the difference between solid, trustworthy information and a straightforward hallucination.
So, the advice from experts is: be skeptical.
Don鈥檛 blindly trust ChatGPT or any AI chatbot with the information it鈥檚 providing you. Always question the information you鈥檙e being fed and do some fact checking, the same way you would for a human.
As Altman says, AI actually 鈥渟hould be the tech that you don鈥檛 trust that much鈥, rather than the tech that you place all of your trust in, without question.
Furthermore, being a little more skeptical with trust will also be good for eliminating at least a bit of our growing dependence on AI, because that also seems to be becoming an increasingly concerning trend.
Moral of the story: don鈥檛 panic, the house isn鈥檛 on fire. Just practice some healthy scepticism, don鈥檛 blindly trust AI and you鈥檒l be fine.