According to Forbes.com, a large majority of students are already using ChatGPT for homework assignments, creating challenges around plagiarism, cheating, and learning.
Wharton MBA Professor Christian Terwisch says that 'ChatGPT would receive “a B or a B-” on an Ivy League MBA-level exam in operations management'. Another professor at a Utah-based university asked ChatGPT to tweet in his voice - leading Professor Alex Lawrence to declare that “this is the greatest cheating tool ever invented”, according to the Wall Street Journal. The plagiarism potential is potent - so, is banning the tool a realistic solution?
I use AI similar to ChatGPT on ocassion for stuff here on the blog, but for background information only, basically. It is a powerful, helpful tool. but, like anything else, there will always be a dark side to it somehow...
Voltaren Arthritis Pain Gel 2-pack
I have arthritis in both of my knees.
This stuff really does work.



99% of BA degrees are useless, so who cares?
ReplyDeleteA problem I've seen is that professors use AI to catch AI cheats -- and the false positives are way to high. Seems if you use the em-dash (which I do) or the Oxford comma, you get flagged. My daughter-in-law had to dumb down her papers just to get the AI spotting AI to stop false flagging her papers.
ReplyDeleteVoltaren contains grapefruit, should not use if you take blood pressure medication, seizure medications etc. What does it do: interfears with medication especially seizure medications as it causes break thru seizures. How do I know this: research and experience with this product. The things they do not tell you, BTW ingredients do not state grapefruit, use medical term for grapefruit, researched each line item.
ReplyDeleteTotal BS. Neither the active nor any of the excipents have anything at all to do with grapefruit. OTCs are required by law to list actives -diclofenac in this case - and all inactive -excipient- ingredients. The package does that. It's a typical carbopol gel formulation. Diclofenac, the active, DOES have a number of interactions including metoprolol, sertraline, and others. However- nothing to do with the nonexistent grapefruit content, it's the actual active drug itself that may interact. Your physician and your pharmacist will be very aware of these and the other diclofenac interactions, which is why you always tell your doc what OTC products you are taking.
DeleteThank you. That's good to know.
DeleteYou cheat and you don't learn, I guess the question is why are you there? To learn or to do your time and get the piece of paper?
ReplyDeleteWe are all going to pay later for a generation that went to school and never learned.
try some Vic's Vapo Rub. it works great for me plus the smell keeps the skeeters away : )
ReplyDeleteAn OTC counterirritant and topical anesthetic. Might very well provide some relief, and it's a darn sight safer than diclofenac, which can cause GI bleeding if taken in the wrong dose or too long.
DeleteI put Voltaren on my arthritic hands almost every night before bed. And have for ten years or so.
ReplyDelete