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That's an unfair response, I feel. @TooTallTim is just pointing out that there's a lot of poor / wasteful spending of public funds, as things stand.
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No real policy has been communicated - thinking what one might seek help on, I envisage the queries being sufficiently general to not pose confidentiality risks. But you never know.
My concern was from a developmental point of view - the best in our team are the true critical thinkers; CnPing ChatGPT answers (which are often wrong, tbh) is not a good way to develop critical thinking skills.
Our professional bodies all vehemently warn against its use.
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For my team meetings, I often give my reports a chance to prep on something I want to talk about. Either email me thoughts beforehand or bring a clear answer/POVs to the meeting.
It's become apparent to me that my newest starter is using ChatGPT or similar - his answers/POVs are borderline gibberish, but very elaborately written.
It feels to me like I need to call it out because of the risks it brings in our day to day work.
Anyone had a similar conversation? How do I go about this? Do I simply call it out (privately obvs)?
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https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cy47dz8yp4vo
Do people like Gregg Wallace do this to make others feel uncomfortable, and to exert power? Or do they think "How can they resist!? This will end up in me having sex." Or is it both?
It's a genuine question because it baffles me when a grown adult behaves like a 13yr old.
Winter tournament as well, by the looks of things.
The whole thing can, once more, FRO.