Will the textbooks and Encyclopaedia will still be in demand? — Corvus
Well, the chatty robot can do a lot of the searching for you and provide a quick answer. — jgill
While the robot's sources may well be impeccable, you can't prove it. — Vera Mont
On Wikipedia, for example, I have found advanced mathematics pages to be very accurate, but elementary pages not necessarily. — jgill
The New York Times is suing Microsoft and OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, claiming millions of its news articles have been misused by the tech companies to train their AI-powered chatbots.
It's the first time one of America's big traditional media companies has taken on the new technology in court. And it sets up a showdown over the increasingly contentious use of copyrighted content to fuel artificial intelligence software.
The legal complaint, which demands a jury trial in a New York district court, says the bots' creators have refused to recognise copyright protections afforded by legislation and the US Constitution. It says the bots, including those incorporated into Microsoft products like its Bing search engine, have repurposed the Times's content to compete with it.
They can't be continually updated, like Wikipedia. They cost $. — jgill
With the advent of A.I. and the use of ChatGPT getting popular, I wonder if all the Encyclopaedia and Textbooks become obsolete. Would it be the case, or the textbooks and Encyclopaedia will still be in demand? — Corvus
In case of the online information such as from WiKi or ChatGPT, the editors, publishers, scholars ..etc source information can be unknown or vague. And also the quality and accuracy of the information could be a bit suspicious too.are you saying we are also doing away with the editors, publishers, scholars, and reviews of the references and citations? Because those were what it took to create those books. — L'éléphant
I would think the copyrights issue will always be with us. If you wrote something, and published it, then you wouldn't want someone quoting them without acknowledging your authorship or asking for your permission to quote or use them for their uses, would you?So, I don't understand the question. And are you also including in your question the copyrights? Is authorship also obsolete? — L'éléphant
It's more than a preference, but yes, I voted that the printed books are very relevant. There are legal properties attached to the physical copies of a book -- it is a tangible property which is regulated by the distribution, copyrights, printing, plagiarism laws. Out-of-print books could be re-printed. The years (20xx) and number of copies printed become its valuable properties.In case of the online information such as from WiKi or ChatGPT, the editors, publishers, scholars ..etc source information can be unknown or vague. And also the quality and accuracy of the information could be a bit suspicious too.
I prefer relying on the information from the traditional printed books and articles for the clearer information of the source, editors, writers and publishers. — Corvus
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