• Onno (VK6FLAB)
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    556 months ago

    Not just burnout, opportunism features with several users I’ve spoken with. The level of ignorance surrounding ChatGPT is staggering.

    One egregious use I know of was a developer who used it to write software to analyse a government dataset despite their department having put in place specific and targeted restrictions specifically against any such activities.

    Their workaround was to use their private email to exfiltrate data and subsequently introduce the code.

    Their rationale was that it didn’t harm anyone and their ICT department would vet any code. They were not concerned about this private data showing up on the ChatGPT public log, nor were they concerned about the accuracy of their code.

    I think that this is just the tip of the iceberg and I think it’s going to take a serious data breach of identifying information before people lose their jobs over this type of misuse.

    • @CosmoNova
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      216 months ago

      People have already lost jobs for this very behavior back in 2022. I remember reading news about Samsung managers even being sued by their employer because they fed secrets into ChatGPT. And if I remember correctly this serious breach was committed for the sole purpose of brushing up some emails.

    • @tsonfeir
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      106 months ago

      What is the ChatGPT public log?

      • Onno (VK6FLAB)
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        86 months ago

        For a period the interactions you had with ChatGPT were public and a live stream was available.

        At the time when I looked at it, there was an astonishing amount of non-english traffic, but that might have been due to the fact that my UTC+8 timezone in Perth is the same as mainland China.

        I had a quick search just now to see if I could find a link, but all I can locate is posts about new privacy controls, so perhaps that "feature"went by the wayside at some point.

    • @asdfasdfasdf
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      16 months ago

      Don’t leave me hanging. Was the dev fired / sent to jail?

  • @[email protected]
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    126 months ago

    Yup. Throw in multiple levels of contractors in various counties and guaranteed AI is being used. (Think subcontractor’s employee using AI to keep up.)

    AI is a great spying tool.

  • amzd
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    126 months ago

    The report also found that 46 percent of people want to quit their jobs this year.

    Is that a normal amount?

  • @[email protected]
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    126 months ago

    Of course burnout is a real thing and most of us are increasingly overburdened. Most work just seems to suck more and more and the lines between personal life and work life keep blurring. Nonetheless, this AI use would happen with or without burnout - it’s just opportunism. Also, Who the hell is supposed to do this training the article refers to? Does your office already have an AI tsar that could train people on best use? I haven’t seen much of that yet.

    • Semi-Hemi-Lemmygod
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      86 months ago

      The headline sounds a bit like “Burnout is pushing construction workers to use nail guns.”

  • shnizmuffin
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    16 months ago

    … according to a work trend index published Wednesday by Microsoft

    Yeah, I’m going to go out on a limb here and call bullshit. No one is turning to AI to alleviate burnout. The only tasks these LLM tools can reliability accomplish aren’t worth using an LLM for.

    • Joelk111
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      6 months ago

      Not a day goes by where I don’t use our company’s internal LLM instance to generate or debug some code. It isn’t due to burnout, it’s due to convenience.