Hi folks, itâs Brad. ChatGPT is about to create headaches for teachers trying to catch cheaters. But firstâ¦Todayâs must-reads:⢠Apple makes
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Hi folks, itâs Brad. ChatGPT is about to create headaches for teachers trying to catch cheaters. But first⦠Todayâs must-reads: ⢠Apple makes plans to [allow outside app stores](
⢠The US is about to [add more Chinese firms]( to its trade blacklistÂ
⢠EU regulators cleared the way for [transatlantic data flows]( Got a minute? Weâd love your input on Bloomberg Tech and how we can best serve you. [Please take this short survey](. Off to detention When I first tried ChatGPT, the almost [magically sophisticated]( artificial intelligence tool made by OpenAI, my initial reaction was to marvel at its crisp answers and conversational lucidity. My second thought, as the father of high-school kids, was to say a small prayer for the teachers of the world. Because ChatGPT knows things. It knows the metaphorical significance of Boo Radley in To Kill a Mocking Bird. It can opine with relative clarity on the merits of autobiography as a literary form in relation to Richard Wrightâs Black Boy. It can wax on about morality in Shakespeareâs final play, The Tempest. It canât yet spin perfect answers right away. But thatâs the charm of this remarkable AI chatbot; it riffs off user questions and then hones its answers, based on a large corpus of internet content that OpenAIâs language processing model has ingested over the past few years. To put it rather bluntly: ChatGPT can do studentsâ homework for them. âThe undergraduate essayâ wrote [The Atlantic](, âis about to be disrupted from the ground up.â When the service went offline this week due to high demand, my Bloomberg Opinion colleague [Trung Phan]( tweeted, âThere must be a biblical amount of semester-end essay cheating going on right now.â This isnât just the usual [Sisyphean cycle of panic]( that accompanies all new technologies. Even experts in the field of safeguarding the originality of student work are marveling at the advances represented by ChatGPT. âWhat caught me off guard was how much of a leap forward it was,â said Eric Wang, vice president of artificial intelligence for Turnitin, a plagiarism detection service owned by Advance Publications Inc., the parent company of Conde Nast. Founded in 1999, Turnitin works with about 16,000 school systems around the world to detect student plagiarism. Its software scours the web to see if a student ripped off an essay from, say, Wikipedia, and its algorithms can identify problems like an overreliance on citations or even spot examples of [contract cheating]( â hiring third parties, sometimes from developing countries, to complete their homework for them. But ChatGPT represents a more significant challenge: an AI-powered chatbot from a Silicon Valley startup, funded to the tune of $1 billion from Microsoft Corp. alone. Wang said for now, ChatGPTâs answers should be easily identifiable both by teachers and Turnitin software. The service makes lots of factual [errors](, and its language model tends to generate linear sentences and pick broad, obvious words, instead of the occasionally narrower vocabulary that a student would select. This creates signals that could be detectable by Turnitin and other anti-plagiarism tools. But Wang also acknowledges that AI is only going to get more sophisticated â perhaps quickly. OpenAI, for example, is currently showing partners the fourth iteration of its language model, GPT-4; ChatGPT is based on a variation of GPT-3. âItâs early days, the halcyon days of the field,â Wang said. âWeâll look back in a year or two and think about these things with wonder and recognize how primitive they were.â OpenAI appears to recognize that it bears some of the responsibility for guarding against deceitful uses of its service. According to [TechCrunch](, Scott Aaronson, a computer science professor at the University of Texas, Austin, and a guest researcher at OpenAI, recently said in a lecture that the company is studying hiding cryptographic signals, called watermarks, in ChatGPT results, so that theyâll be more easily identifiable by companies like Turnitin. Independent experts worry that it will be easy for committed adversaries â say, a technically sophisticated student â to detect and strip out these signals. Another option is for schools and colleges to acknowledge the new reality posed by AI and change how they evaluate students. âThe days of asking students to summarize the themes in The Odyssey â no, thatâs an easy question one would get from an AI model,â said Annie Chechitelli, Turnitinâs chief product officer. Instead, teachers could ask the class to explore themes of hospitality in the epic poem and then put them in the context of current events, which would defeat AI models like ChatGPT that donât ingest current news sources. She also envisions a time when teachers ask students to record a video explaining or defending what they wrote. But Chechitelli is also pretty solemn about the challenges schools will face over next few years. âThe glacial speed with which change happens in higher education is going to make things hard,â she said. âThe conversations need to start on campus today. Students are already well aware of what tools they can use.â â[Brad Stone](mailto:bstone12@bloomberg.net)
Today in Twitter Twitter is selling the blue check mark again. Subscribers pay $8 a month or [$11 if they bill through Apple](. The company disbanded its trust and safety council, a group of independent experts who [advised on content moderation](. Get fully charged Google defeated a privacy lawsuit from Chrome browser users [accusing the company of spying on them]( after they opted out of tracking. The FTX collapse will [steer the regulation path]( for all crypto. The Indian fintech Paytm will buy back $100 million worth of stock after a [75% plunge in the price](. Airbnb said racial discrimination persists on its platform. White customers have an acceptance rate [almost three percentage points higher]( than Black customers. Follow Us scMore from Bloomberg Get Bloomberg Tech weeklies in your inbox: - [Power On]( for Apple scoops, consumer tech news and more, every Sunday
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