• @LemmyIsFantastic@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I really don’t care if the law was written by AI. I care about the review and approval of said law afterwards. If the solution is sound and everyone reviewed, this was a win. The fears about not revealing chatgpt use is troubling but I believe he is correct about perceptions.

  • @perviouslyiner@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    The input prompt was pretty clear in its intention: “Create a municipal law … which prohibits [agency] from charging the owner of the property for the payment of a new water meter when it is stolen

    Writing that up in the relevant style-guide is all that the AI was asked to do.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    35 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A bill about water meters that a Brazilian city council unanimously voted to pass in October was revealed to have been entirely written by ChatGPT, its sponsor disclosed last week in an X post.

    Six days later, Porto Alegre councilman Ramiro Rosário shared that the legislation was written by OpenAI’s chatbot, The Washington Post reported.

    In response, ChatGPT responded with solutions that “astounded” Rosário, he told The Post, suggesting two innovative ideas for a problem that plagued his constituents for months.

    According to the Associated Press, Hamilton Sossmeier initially said it set a “dangerous precedent” and was annoyed that Rosário wasn’t transparent about ChatGPT having written the proposal.

    Rosário told Business Insider that he kept the fact that it was generated by ChatGPT a secret because he feared that lawmakers’ prejudices about AI might have prevented it from even being voted on.

    Reflecting on the significance of the AI-generated proposal, Rosário told BI: “I support the idea that artificial intelligence can help optimize resources and the time of political agents and public servants, allowing them to focus on what is truly essential for their work.”


    The original article contains 490 words, the summary contains 185 words. Saved 62%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

    • 667
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      25 months ago

      They didn’t have the ChatGPT Plus subscription.

  • tygerprints
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    -25 months ago

    Our world is doomed. AI eventually will find ways to kill all of us off - after all humans are a real threat to it’s continued takeover of the world.

    • @DoYouNot@lemmy.world
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      115 months ago

      Honestly, I’m increasingly feeling that things like this are a decent use for a technology like ChatGPT. People suck and definitely have ulterior motives to forward their group. With AI, there’s at least some degree of impartiality. We definitely need to regulate the shit out of it and make clear expectations for transparency in its use, but we’re not necessarily doomed. (At least in this specific case.)

    • @big_slap@lemmy.world
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      85 months ago

      did you read the article? the draft was voted on by a committee, so it had to be read by other people. honestly, work like this is perfect for LLMs like chatGPT. what is concerning about this for you?

      • tygerprints
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        35 months ago

        If it isn’t concerning to you, god help you. You’ll find out soon enough why it should be.

          • tygerprints
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            45 months ago

            Maybe I’m reading too much into it, but it’s the “secretly written” by ChatGPT that bothers me. Not the fact that ChatGPT can conceive of something and write it out. I’m not completely against AI, I realize we use it with Siri and Alexis and other apps all the time. Just the idea that a program can create something which APPEARS to be from a legitimate human actor and really isn’t at all - and can even get it passed into law. That’s the part that is frightening, in my opinion.

          • @pinkdrunkenelephants@lemmy.cafe
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            15 months ago

            Because life requires actual human participation and you can’t be a lazy asshole who lets AI, or anything else for that matter, do the living for you.

            • tygerprints
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              35 months ago

              Here here. I agree with that also. However I’m starting to see a future where AI does pretty much everything for us and we turn into those fat blobs who just float around all day (what movie was that? With the robot E.T. looking dude?).

            • @big_slap@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              I agree, but this is work for language written in law. how does what you say tie into this scenario?

              side note, I think everyone who believes what happened here is not good has never collaborated on writing a large document before.