My dad sent me a few chats he had with ChatGPT and they were both stroking each other's egos pretty hard. It was pretty weird. He was using it a lot to get information and prep before a surgery and I felt like ChatGPT reinforced his unrealistic expectations for the speed of recovery. I didn't say anything before the surgery, as I didn't want to break his spirit and a positive attitude has its value.
A couple weeks post-op, when reality set in that the recovery was going to be longer and harder than he expected, we ended up on the topic of AI during a chat. I mentioned how AI can be steered and gave some examples on how I will often frame questions, and come at it from different angles to try and better find some semblance of true. I've even sent him chats that I've had with ChatGPT where I catch it in lies about itself about its own capabilities to try and drive the point home.
His response was to say he also does this, and he's worried about people who aren't as self-aware as "us" who take the AI results at face value. We even discussed people using AI as a therapist, and his concern was that the AI wouldn't challenge someone's existing ideas, like a real therapist often does.
It seems that even though he thinks he is challenging it, and will sometimes go to multiple different chatbots for a more serious question, he is still being misled. The silver lining is that he does have an abnormally large friend network for someone in his 70s. Not just Facebook friends, but people who he regularly sees in person from all eras of his life. Hopefully that keeps things in check and he doesn't go too far off the deep end. Though he does seem to disproportionally value ChatGPT's opinion over most others, probably because it always tells him how smart and insightful he is.
My dad sent me a few chats he had with ChatGPT and they were both stroking each other's egos pretty hard. It was pretty weird. He was using it a lot to get information and prep before a surgery and I felt like ChatGPT reinforced his unrealistic expectations for the speed of recovery. I didn't say anything before the surgery, as I didn't want to break his spirit and a positive attitude has its value.
A couple weeks post-op, when reality set in that the recovery was going to be longer and harder than he expected, we ended up on the topic of AI during a chat. I mentioned how AI can be steered and gave some examples on how I will often frame questions, and come at it from different angles to try and better find some semblance of true. I've even sent him chats that I've had with ChatGPT where I catch it in lies about itself about its own capabilities to try and drive the point home.
His response was to say he also does this, and he's worried about people who aren't as self-aware as "us" who take the AI results at face value. We even discussed people using AI as a therapist, and his concern was that the AI wouldn't challenge someone's existing ideas, like a real therapist often does.
It seems that even though he thinks he is challenging it, and will sometimes go to multiple different chatbots for a more serious question, he is still being misled. The silver lining is that he does have an abnormally large friend network for someone in his 70s. Not just Facebook friends, but people who he regularly sees in person from all eras of his life. Hopefully that keeps things in check and he doesn't go too far off the deep end. Though he does seem to disproportionally value ChatGPT's opinion over most others, probably because it always tells him how smart and insightful he is.