I’ve been working with so many students who turn to it as a first resort for everything. The second a problem stumps them, it’s AI. The first source for research is AI.
It’s not even about the tech, there’s just something about not wanting to learn that deeply upsets me. It’s not really something I can understand. There is no reason to avoid getting better at writing.


I feel like this is a progression of a trend I’ve been railing against for a while. My workplace has to contend with a massive amount of ever-changing regulatory and engineering information. There are thousands of pages of documents, with differing levels of authority and detail, governing all aspects of what we do.
I’ve been begging people to read the docs. Don’t just ask your manager or predecessor, don’t just skim through it, and for fuck’s sake don’t ctrl+f until you find something that looks good and run with it out of context. Treating this sort of research like a Google search is killing us during compliance inspections. Read the docs!
Shit changes, often. I have to constantly remind them, it’s not what the docs said last year. It’s what they say now. Know your responsibilities, know where to find the info that pertains to them, and review it often. Read it, know it, or at least know where to find it.
It’s getting worse. I’ve seen experienced people submit supplemental documents with egregious errors after they “just used AI for grammar checking”. I’ve seen proposed policy docs with references to regulations that are decades out of date. I’ve gotten questions about implementing things that were outlawed or obsolete before I was born, and I’ve been around a looooong while.
We can’t meat puppet our way through this, blindly following AI, or people are going to die in horrible industrial accidents. I mean that literally. People will be killed. This is why we have the current mass quanties of regulatory documents, to prevent people from literally dying in awful ways.
I’m to old for this shit.