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highplainsdem

(63,440 posts)
14. Sigh. It was already obvious a few years ago that use of generative AI was dumbing users down and
Tue Jun 9, 2026, 01:07 PM
13 hrs ago

encouraging cheating. (And OpenAI's Sam Altman was already saying a few years ago that using AI shouldn't be considered cheating.)

No one should be using generative AI tools for any reason. They're always unethical to use, and always flawed tech that can hallucinate at any time. The AI resultsare always just imitation knowledge and accomplishment. And that's true whether the genAI tools are generating text, images, video, music or code.

Every single use of them is cheating or fraud, in a way. Every single use of them can result in errors.

Every single use of them is enabled by the initial theft of the world's intellectual property to train the AI, and people are setting concern about ethics aside when they use gen AI.

But people are still tempted to use genAI tools because they think offering AI results as their own work makes them seem smarter or more talented than they are. They're still tempted to use AI because it saves time - at least if they don't check the results. They often don't, and the more they rely on AI, the less likely they are to check results.

As long as society treats using this flawed, unethical tech as a good thing, we're going to see this sort of cheating and stupidity.

GenAI is fundamentally unethical and flawed and hurts both users and those who are expected to treat AI use and AI results as valuable.

Recommendations

2 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

I'd think they'd at least have a paralegal proof it Torchlight 15 hrs ago #1
Yes.. But if they are so cavalier as to use AI to prepare even the initial filing, perhaps their hlthe2b 14 hrs ago #8
Counsel, either the citation is in The Blue Book, or it isn't. no_hypocrisy 15 hrs ago #2
The Bluebook is a guide to formatting citations. Ms. Toad 8 hrs ago #24
Ooffff Hassin Bin Sober 15 hrs ago #3
Whoa, that's some special PatSeg 15 hrs ago #4
they received their juris doctorates UpInArms 15 hrs ago #6
And I suppose that PatSeg 14 hrs ago #9
I hope the AI didn't say "Yutes" JustABozoOnThisBus 13 hrs ago #15
Really? PatSeg 13 hrs ago #16
From the movie "My Cousin Vinny" JustABozoOnThisBus 13 hrs ago #18
Thanks, I'd forgotten that! PatSeg 9 hrs ago #23
This makes the best case against the use of AI in most settings UpInArms 15 hrs ago #5
Sadly, I think it will be a while PatSeg 14 hrs ago #11
When the legal system goes full Reddit Sympthsical 14 hrs ago #7
About time! dickthegrouch 14 hrs ago #10
There should be HUGE fines Quanto Magnus 14 hrs ago #12
They would have been better off with these guys Ray Bruns 14 hrs ago #13
Sigh. It was already obvious a few years ago that use of generative AI was dumbing users down and highplainsdem 13 hrs ago #14
Good, i hope Figarosmom 13 hrs ago #17
Vendor(s) of whichever AI apps were used by the lawyers: WestMichRad 13 hrs ago #19
So much for a labor saving app replacing significant human action, eh? Ford_Prefect 12 hrs ago #20
Don't trust your soul to no backwoods, southern A.I. LudwigPastorius 12 hrs ago #21
AI says: Kristi Gnome will get her day in AI court. usonian 9 hrs ago #22
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