Insider reports OpenAI's powerful anti-plagiarism tool for ChatGPT is stalled due to internal debates
Generative AI tools, while they were mainly developed to enhance productivity and creativity, are often misused. Take the incident from the Colorado State Fair's annual art competition in 2022, for example. An ai-generated won a prize, and artists were not happy about it. AI-generated text is also used unfairly in some cases, such as when students use it for their academic work.
However, OpenAI reportedly has a powerful fingerprinting tool that is ready to be deployed. This tool is said to make it much easier to detect text generated by ChatGPT. But as per a recent report from The Wall Street Journal, internal conflict prevented it from being deployed.
This fingerprint tool is said to be 99.9% accurate and could be a big help in detecting AI plagiarism. However, insiders report that some employees believe deploying it would have a negative impact on non-native English speakers who use generative AI tools like ChatGPT to communicate clearly.
Moreover, a recent survey by OpenAI has reportedly revealed that 1/3rd of the paying members don't want the technology to be deployed. The Wall Street Journal also reports that the debate has been ongoing internally for two years, and OpenAI has yet to come to a proper conclusion.
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