
Watch out, hallucinating Humphrey's about in Whitehall
Your report (The 'death of creativity'? AI job fears stalk advertising industry, 9 June) quotes the chief executive of a big ad agency saying 'AI will disintermediate a large number of jobs'. I asked an AI tool to put this into plain English. Ten minutes later, it's still thinking about it. Perhaps absurd management euphemisms is one area where the human brain can still cut through the crap more effectively than AI?Neil ColeHemel Hempstead, Hertfordshire
Heather Stewart says large language models, while destroying creative jobs and careers, 'remain prone to casually making things up' (Policymakers who think AI can help rescue flagging UK economy should take heed, 15 June). Could her article spur MPs into taking meaningful legislative action to protect their own positions?Jonathan J RossSheffield
Re Heather Stewart's article, I'm not a specialist, but has anyone tried unplugging AI, going for a walk and then going back to check what's happened? If the door's locked, we've had it.Gavin GreenwoodBrighton
To check one AI's 'hallucination' flaws, can we not use another AI to check what the first AI has produced, and possibly made up?Alan WorsleyHull
As the English language still seems to lack a verb meaning 'to generate something via AI', might I suggest 'to bot'? This would provide a quick means of asking whether someone really did the work themselves or just botted it.Edmund DoraghSchwäbisch Gmünd, Germany
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