Lawyer Used ChatGPT In Court

Using ChatGPT and other Large Language Model (LLM) applications:

LLM’s will be part of your life. You will need to know how to use them productively, ethically, and legally. You are encouraged to use them in this course. In fact, in certain contexts, you may be required to use them. If you use an LLM such as GPT-4o as part of a blog post, an assignment, project, or presentation you must:

• List the name and version of the LLM you used in your credits.
• Show the prompt(s) you used.
• Show the results produced by the prompt(s).
• Show any fact-checks you carried out.

These phrases tell me you use chat GPT. 

“I got fired from that corrupt publication because I refused to let AI replace passionate, competent writers, and I wear that job termination like a badge of honor.“

Read “I’m a Professional Editor and These Phrases Tell Me You Used ChatGPT“ by Maria Cassano on Medium: https://writingcooperative.com/im-a-professional-editor-and-these-phrases-tell-me-you-used-chatgpt-23236708918f

 

These phrases make it extremely obvious that you used ChatGPT:
“Treasure trove”
“Intricate tapestry”
“It’s important to note that”
“It’s essential to consider”
“While navigating the complexities of”
“A testament to”
“Furthermore”
“Consequently”
“In the world of”
“Let’s delve into”
“Look no further than”
“Whether you’re… or…”
“A plethora of”
“In conclusion”
What do most of these phrases have in common?
They’re low-effort transition phrases that don’t mean much of anything. They’re fluff. Place-holders. Wasted word-count. Bad writing.

ChatGPT is the New C Grade

Introduction to Deep Research