A new report from plagiarism detector Copyleaks found that 60% of OpenAI’s GPT-3.5 outputs contained some form of plagiarism.
Why it matters: Content creators from authors and songwriters to The New York Times are arguing in court that generative AI trained on copyrighted material ends up spitting out exact copies.
No. It’s not really clear what LLMs do, but it certainly depends on context.
What they fundamentally do is continue a text. That’s what they were originally trained to do. Then they were fine-tuned to continue a chat log or respond to an instruction. To be able to do that, they have learned a lot. Unfortunately, we do not know what.
If you ask for a summary of some text, it will give you one; regardless of whether the text even exists.
The summary could be one written by a human that it has memorized. Or it could be complete nonsense, that it is making up on the fly. You never know.