It depends on how much you know about the topic, Both methods have their advantages.
Cheers,
Peter
From: Todd Allen [mailto:toddmallen@gmail.com]
Sent: 17 May 2023 20:10
To: Wikimedia Mailing List
Subject: [Wikimedia-l] Re: ChatGPT as a reliable source
Though, this does run the risk of encouraging people to take the "backwards"
approach to writing an article--writing some stuff, and then (hopefully at least) trying
to come up with sources for it.
The much superior approach is to locate the available sources first, and then to develop
the article based upon what those sources say.
Todd
On Wed, May 17, 2023 at 12:06 PM Samuel Klein <meta.sj(a)gmail.com> wrote:
First: Wikipedia style for dense inline citations is one of the most granular and
articulate around, so we're pushing the boundaries in some cases of research norms for
clarity in sourcing. That's great; also means sometimes we are considering nuances
that may be new.
Second: We're approaching a topic close to my heart, which is distinguishing
reference-sources from process-sources. Right now we often capture process sources (for
an edit) in the edit summary, and this is not visible anywhere on the resulting article.
Translations via a translate tool; updates by a script that does a particular class of
work (like spelling or grammer checking); applying a detailed diff that was workshopped on
some other page. An even better interface might allow for that detail to be visible to
readers of the article [w/o traversing the edit history], and linked to the
sections/paragraphs/sentences affected.
I think any generative tools used to rewrite a section or article, or to produce a sibling
version for a different reading-level, or to generate a timeline or other visualization
that is then embedded in the article, should all be cited somehow. To Jimbo's point,
that doesn't belong in a References section as we currently have them. But I'd
like to see us develop a way to capture these process notes in a more legible way, so
readers can discover them without browsing the revision history.
People using generative tools to draft new material should find reliable sources for every
claim in that material, much more densely than you would when summarizing a series of
sources yourself.
However, as we approach models that can discover sources and check facts, a combination of
those with current generative tools could produce things closer to what we'd consider
acceptable drafts, and at scale could generate reference works in languages that lack
them. I suggest a separate project for those as the best way to explore the implications
of being able to do this at scale, and should capture the full model/tuning/prompt details
of how each edit was generated. Such an automatically-updated resource would not be a
good reliable source, just as we avoid citing any tertiary sources, but could be a
research tool for WP editors and modelers alike.
SJ
On Wed, May 17, 2023 at 9:27 AM Jimmy Wales <jimmywales(a)wikitribune.com> wrote:
One way I think we can approach this is to think of it as being the latest in this
progression:
spellchecker -> grammar checker -> text generation support
We wouldn't have any sort of footnote or indication of any kind that a spellchecker or
grammar checker was
used by an editor, it's just built-in to many writing tools. Similarly, if writing a
short prompt to generate a longer
text is used, then we have no reason to cite that.
What we do have, though, is a responsibility to check the output. Spellcheckers can be
wrong (suggesting the correct
spelling of the wrong word for example). Grammar checkers can be wrong (trying to correct
the grammar of a direct quote
for example). Generative AI models can be wrong - often simply making things up out of
thin air that sound plausible.
If someone uses a generative AI to help them write some text, that's not a big deal.
If they upload text without checking
the facts and citing a real source, that's very bad.
On 2023-05-17 11:51, The Cunctator wrote:
Again at no point should even an improved version be considered a source; at best it would
be a research or editing tool.
On Wed, May 17, 2023, 4:40 AM Lane Chance <zinkloss(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Keep in mind how fast these tools change. ChatGPT, Bard and
competitors understand well the issues with lack of sources, and Bard
does sometimes put a suitable source in a footnote, even if it
(somewhat disappointingly) just links to wikipedia. There's likely to
be a variation soon that does a decent job of providing references,
and at that point the role of these tools moves beyond being an
amusement to a far more credible research tool.
So, these long discussions about impact on open knowledge are quite
likely to have to run again in 2024...
On Wed, 17 May 2023 at 09:24, Kiril Simeonovski
<kiril.simeonovski(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Thank you everyone for your input.
Your considerations are very similar to mine, and they give a clear direction towards
what the guidelines regarding the use of ChatGPT should point to.
Best regards,
Kiril
On Wed, 17 May 2023 at 10:11, Ilario valdelli <valdelli(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Define "reliable source".
A source is reliable if can be consulted by other people than the editor
to check the content.
Is this possible with ChatGPT? No, becaue if you address the same
question to CHatGPT, you will have a different answer.
In this case how the people verificaying the information can check that
the editor did not invent the result?
Kind regards
On 17/05/2023 09:08, Kiril Simeonovski wrote:
Dear Wikimedians,
Two days ago, a participant in one of our edit-a-thons consulted
ChatGPT when writing an article on the Macedonian Wikipedia that did
not exist on any other language edition. ChatGPT provided some output,
but the problem was how to cite it.
The community on the Macedonian Wikipedia has not yet had a discussion
on this matter and we do not have any guidelines. So, my main
questions are the following:
* Can ChatGPT be used as a reliable source and, if yes, how would the
citation look like?
* Are there any ongoing community discussions on introducing guidelines?
My personal opinion is that ChatGPT should be avoided as a reliable
source, and only the original source where the algorithm gets the
information from should be used.
Best regards,
Kiril
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