Researchers surprised to find less-educated areas adopting AI writing tools faster
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singletona@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
'researchers surprised people that don't know how to do a thing cheat to use half baked tools to do the thing for them.'
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jrs100000@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
People bad at math use calculators. People with bad handwriting prefer to type. Weak people use levers. Slow people rely more on wheels. Its like were a bunch of tool using primates or something.
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paraphrand@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
Professional writing was always fake. And this just proves it more.
I hate how increasingly we will be forced to take patronizing AI slop at face value.
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empricorn@feddit.nlreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
Even before the AI fad, services like Grammarly were surprising to me. So... you're marketing to non-readers, and people who want to sound better in written communication... without learning to write better... Huh. My current employment has very little formal writing as part of it, yet I still think learning how to effectively communicate is absolutely vital for any job, or at least for getting a better one...
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cygnus@lemmy.careplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
vital
Funny that you emphasized this word, which has become such a tell of ChatGPT (along with "delve" and "crucial").
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empricorn@feddit.nlreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
Are you... accusing me of being a bot?
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tal@lemmy.todayreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
Professional writing was always fake.
I don't even know what that means. You mean that professional authors use spell-checkers or something?
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sem@lemmy.blahaj.zonereplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
How are you such an expert on ChatGPT? Sus
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sem@lemmy.blahaj.zonereplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
How are journalists, novelists, researchers, etc fake?
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electricyarn@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
No, they just said it was funny, given the context.
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grumpyduckling@sh.itjust.worksreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
Are you talking about corporate jargon? Intentionally vague and used by people to try to sound smart. I always ask what someone means when they use it because they could have just used clear and normal language.
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jrs100000@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
—Elevate—
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paraphrand@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
Sorry, I was focused in on professional communication. All those emails sent by bosses that feign interest or care. All necessary niceties that can grate on someone once they know many are just masks.
I wasn’t being precise, and I assumed others wouldn’t think about it in such broad terms. I agree that my statement would be silly if it applied to all writing that people get paid for.
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paraphrand@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
I said more in another comment, but I mean stuff like email. The thing companies like Apple are showing ads on TV for.
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paraphrand@lemmy.worldreplied to Guest 12 days ago last edited by
I appreciate that someone could tell I didn’t mean to be super broad.
Jargon definitely falls under the umbrella I was pointing at. Communication among co-workers. Managers. Etc.
The whole style feels cold to me. And impersonal. And I hate it. Jargon can definitely play a role. But I’m also ok with certain types that actually do make communication flow smoother. But yeah, the vapid jargon that masks a lack of understanding, curiosity or humility is a bummer.
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muhyb@programming.devreplied to Guest 11 days ago last edited by
I'm surprised that researchers are surprised at all.
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anotherpenguin@programming.devreplied to Guest 11 days ago last edited by
But was it funny?
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petter1@lemm.eereplied to Guest 11 days ago last edited by
I always use AI to write texts.
I am to fucking lazy to write more than keywords
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I let it format into a proper text and tell it what it should adjust. That is one task AI is very good in (way better than myself).
For me, it is the faster approach, but I always tend to write with enormous information density (which is disliked by many people somehow) anyway.
I personally prefer the shortest wording with most information to read, so I sometimes let AI summarise.
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engineergaming@feddit.nlreplied to Guest 11 days ago last edited by
I have also seen a video discussing that Grammarly often makes mistakes because it doesn't understand context and nuance as much as a human would.
8/62