Maybe it's just down to different screen sizes, but when I open a new chat in chat GPT, the prompt is in the center of the screen, and the disclaimer is quite a distance away at the very bottom of the screen.
Though, my real point is we need to weigh that disclaimer, against the combined messaging and marketing efforts of the AI industry. No TV ad gives me that disclaimer.
Then we can look at people's behavior. Look at the (surprisingly numerous) cases of lawyers getting taken to the woodshed by a judge for submitting filings to a court with chat GPT introduced fake citations! Or, someone like Ana Navarro confidentially repeating an incorrect fact, and when people pushed back saying "take it up with chat GPT" (https://x.com/ananavarro/status/1864049783637217423).
I just don't think the average person who isn't following this closely understands the disclaimer. Hell, they probably don't even really read it, because most people skip over reading most de-emphasized text in most-UIs.
So, in my opinion, whether it's right next to the text-box or not, the disclaimer simply cannot carry the same amount of cultural impact as the "other side of the ledger" that are making wild, unfounded claims to the public.
Though, my real point is we need to weigh that disclaimer, against the combined messaging and marketing efforts of the AI industry. No TV ad gives me that disclaimer.
Here's an Apple Intelligence ad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A0BXZhdDqZM. No disclaimer.
Here's a Meta AI ad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2clcDZ-oapU. No disclaimer.
Then we can look at people's behavior. Look at the (surprisingly numerous) cases of lawyers getting taken to the woodshed by a judge for submitting filings to a court with chat GPT introduced fake citations! Or, someone like Ana Navarro confidentially repeating an incorrect fact, and when people pushed back saying "take it up with chat GPT" (https://x.com/ananavarro/status/1864049783637217423).
I just don't think the average person who isn't following this closely understands the disclaimer. Hell, they probably don't even really read it, because most people skip over reading most de-emphasized text in most-UIs.
So, in my opinion, whether it's right next to the text-box or not, the disclaimer simply cannot carry the same amount of cultural impact as the "other side of the ledger" that are making wild, unfounded claims to the public.