A chatbot that got information from many online sources passed tests at a US law school. It wrote essays about everything from the Constitution to taxes to torts.?
This week, Microsoft gave the US startup a considerable amount of money.?The results have been so impressive that teachers are worried it could usher at the end of traditional classroom education.
Even though this was enough to get a passing grade, the bot was near the bottom of the class and "bombed" on multiple-choice math questions.
"ChatGPT's essays showed a strong understanding of basic legal rules and were always well-organized and written," the authors wrote.
But the bot "often struggled to spot issues when given an open-ended prompt, a core skill on law school exams."
"Overall, ChatGPT wasn't a great law student acting alone," he wrote on Twitter.
"But we expect that collaborating with humans, language models like ChatGPT would be very useful to law students taking exams and practicing lawyers."
"(They) had a hunch, and their hunch was right because ChatGPT had perfect grammar and was somewhat repetitive," Choi wrote.
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