UCLA grad brazenly shows off ChatGPT that did his assignments for him and critics arent happy: Were so cooked

Was it CheatGPT?It’s no secret that artificial intelligence use is becoming increasingly ubiquitous in academia.But while most prefer to keep their AI schoolwork aids confidential, one student at the University of California, Los Angeles, brazenly boasted about employing the tech during his commencement ceremony.The shocking moment was captured during UCLA’s livestream at the Pauley Pavilion earlier this month, but videos have since been reshared to Instagram and X, where they’ve amassed millions of views.In the brief clip, which was displayed on the facility’s Jumbotron, Andre Mai, a computational and systems biology major, is seen holding up his laptop to show off walls of AI-generated text that he ostensibly used for his final exams.The footage shows the undergrad proudly scrolling through the evidence of his so-called high-tech homework hacking as the rest of the graduating class of 2025 whoops and cheers in the background.“Let’s gooooo!!!!!!” he mouths while hyping up the crowd.The video didn’t sit nearly as well with online viewers, many of whom saw it as indicative of societal decline.“We’re so cooked,” lamented one disillusioned commenter under a repost on X, while another wrote, “Pandora’s Box has been opened.”“We’re still supposed to take college degrees seriously btw,” scoffed a third.“Our future doctors really gon have one AirPod in asking ChatGPT how to do open heart surgery,” quipped one X wit.“If ChatGPT is why you graduated, ChatGPT has already taken your job,” theorized one poster, reiterating techsperts’ concerns that AI could render effectively render human employees obsolete.These fears were also echoed on Reddit.

“This is going to be the biggest problem,” fretted one poster.“People just aren’t going to learn anything anymore, instead of a tool to help you learn people are just going to think it’s a magic answer box.”However, some defenders applauded Mai for seemingly gaming the system wit...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles