this post was submitted on 25 Feb 2024
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A new report from plagiarism detector Copyleaks found that 60% of OpenAI's GPT-3.5 outputs contained some form of plagiarism.

Why it matters: Content creators from authors and songwriters to The New York Times are arguing in court that generative AI trained on copyrighted material ends up spitting out exact copies.

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[–] pennomi@lemmy.world 86 points 9 months ago (18 children)

The individual GPT-3.5 output with the highest similarity score was in computer science (100%), followed by physics (92%), and psychology (88%).

And that’s why this claim is mostly bullshit. These use cases are all sciences, where the correct solution is usually the same or highly similar no matter who writes it. Small snippets of computer code cannot be copyrighted anyway.

Not surprisingly, softer subjects like “English” and “Theatre” rank extremely low on this scale.

[–] FaceDeer@kbin.social 33 points 9 months ago (2 children)

Not to mention that a response "containing" plagiarism is a pretty poorly defined criterion. The system being used here is proprietary so we don't even know how it works.

I went and looked at how low theater and such were and it's dramatic:

The lowest similarity scores appeared in theater (0.9%), humanities (2.8%) and English language (5.4%).

[–] SpaceNoodle@lemmy.world 9 points 9 months ago
[–] BattleGrown@lemmy.world 9 points 9 months ago

Yeah, anyone who has written a thesis knows those tools are bullshit. My handwritten 140 page master's thesis had a similarity index of 11%.

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