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PRIVACY
Opinion

Opinion: ChatGPT can boost productivity but can cost a business its reputation

The team at GWS Media in Bristol has been testing the AI system, weighing up its capabilities and limitations

A general view of The ChatGPT website(Image: John Walton/PA Wire)

ChatGPT can reduce workload and boost productivity, but can cost a business its reputation if not used with care. While it can produce output quickly, the information is not always reliable.

It has the ability to comprehend complex questions and give relevant responses, but it is not without its quirks and limitations. There is a risk there could be factual errors in its response or that it infringes on copyright, which could lead to complaints, reputational damage or costly lawsuits.

Copyright and fact-checking

The IP Helpdesk, which supports European SMEs, highlights that AI cannot own copyright. The bot’s responses come from content previously generated by others and a ChatGPT user may unwillingly infringe on someone else’s intellectual property.

OpenAI, the Microsoft-backed creator of ChatGPT, includes a disclaimer that “ChatGPT may produce inaccurate information about people, places, or facts".

Its helpdesk says it will occasionally make up facts or “hallucinate” outputs’ – and users can provide feedback with the ‘thumbs down’ button. Before publishing AI-generated content, it is important to check its accuracy and verify the response against credible sources.

The chatbot had until recently been limited to data available online up to March 2023, limiting its ability to give meaningful responses to any current or recent events in the news. But Open AI has announced an internet-browsing version for paying subscribers.

And it continues to develop, including with the roll-out of voice and image capabilities, allowing users to have a vocal conversation or show ChatGPT what they are talking about.

Security and SEO

OpenAI says it reviews conversations to improve its systems and for safety reasons. It may also use the content to train its models unless users opt out.