Ali Vatanka: We're fixating on inaccuracy in a way we may not, and it may also be what multiplies the work of experts. He says chat GPT gets more of the answers right than people do when they ask questions like are learning styles real or MBTI. "I don't care how it's written, but I do care that it's right," he adds.
ChatGPT, the artificial intelligence chatbot capable of generating human-like text, seems to be everywhere. But how trustworthy are these tools -- and what do they mean for the future of writing and work? Adam brings AI entrepreneur Allie Miller and innovation and entrepreneurship professor Ethan Mollick to discuss the capabilities of ChatGPT, debate its merits and downfalls, and ponder what we should -- and shouldn’t -- leave to AI. Transcripts for ReThinking are available at go.ted.com/RWAGscripts