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Why not? They should use it, with sufficient understanding of what it is. Doctors should not use it to diagnose a patient, but could use it to get some additional ideas for a list of symptoms. Lawyers should obviously not write court documents with it or cite it in court, but they could use it to get some ideas for case law. It's a hallucinating idea generator.

I write very technical articles and use GPT-4 for "fact-checking". It's not perfect, but as a domain expert of what I write, I can sift out what it gets wrong, and still benefit from what it gets right. It has both - suggested some ridiculous edits to my articles, and found some very difficult to spot mistakes, like where a reader might misinterpret something from my language. And that is tremendously valuable.

Doctors, historians, lawyers, and everyone should be open to using LLMs correctly. Which isn't some arcane esoteric way. The first time we visit ChatGPT, it gives a list of limitations and what it shouldn't be used for. Just don't use it for these things, understand its limitations, and then I think it's fine to use it in professional contexts.

Also, GPT-4 and 3.5 now is very different from the original ChatGPT that wasn't a significant departure from GPT-3. GPT-3 hallucinated everything that could resemble a fact more than an abstract idea. What we have now with GPT-4 is much more aligned. It probably wouldn't produce what vanilla ChatGPT produced for this lawyer. But the same principles of reasonable use apply. The user must be the final discriminator that decides whether the output is good or not.



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