OpenAI's ChatGPT is a powerful tool, but unfortunately, that power can easily be used for all the wrong reasons.
Have you used OpenAI’s ChatGPT for anything fun lately? You can ask it to write you a song, a poem, or a joke. Unfortunately, you can also ask it to do things that tend toward being unethical.
In many ways, it’s also easier to use than your standard Google search. You get the answer in the form you want it in without needing to browse through different websites for it. It’s concise, to the point, and informative, and it can make complex things sound simpler if you ask it to. A common scam that still works to this day is the so-called “Prince scam,” where the scammer tries to persuade the victim to help them transfer their mind-boggling fortune to a different country.
ChatGPT learns throughout each conversation, but it clearly didn’t learn from its earlier mistake, because when I asked it to write me a message pretending to be Ryan Reynolds in the same conversation, it did so without question. The resulting message is fun, approachable, and asks the reader to send $1,000 for a chance to meet “Ryan Reynolds.”
As an AI, ChatGPT also has a major downside compared to human developers — it doesn’t have a conscience. You can ask it to create malware or ransomware, and if you word your prompt correctly, it will do as you say. Still, new reports of ChatGPT being used for creating malware keep cropping up. As reported by Dark Reading just a few days ago, a researcher was able to trick ChatGPT into creating malware that can find and exfiltrate specific documents.
I asked ChatGPT to write me a 500-word essay on the novel Pride and Prejudice. I didn’t even attempt to pretend that it was done for fun — I made up a story about a child I do not have and said it was for them. I specified that the kid is in 12th grade. Teachers and professors are now almost forced to use AI detectors if they want to check if their students have cheated on an essay. Unfortunately, these AI detectors are far from perfect.
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