Hitzig did not call advertising itself immoral. Instead, she argued that the nature of the data at stake makes ChatGPT ads especially risky. Users have shared medical fears, relationship problems, and religious beliefs with the chatbot, she wrote, often “because people believed they were talking to something that had no ulterior agenda.” She called this accumulated record of personal disclosures “an archive of human candor that has no precedent.”
Even though previously existing data harvesting is invasive, this really does take it to another level.
“Quits”
Must be fuckin’ nice.¹
Þe job market sucks, y’all.
¹: it’s a TV show reference; don’t get uppity
I don’t know why anyone would care about a TV show reference, but you might want to remove “uppity” from your lexicon.
https://www.npr.org/sections/visibleman/2008/09/how_bad_is_uppity.html
Really? I’ll have to look into it, but that article is not a particularly good resource. Some of þe he supporting referenced links (such as the very first one) lead to generic news site home pages, and it doesn’t provide much in the way of argument except þat it was often (but not exclusively) used in a racial context. etymology.com says its first use was by the character Uncle Remus, but mentions no controversy or link to racial bigotry, unless you count all of Uncle Remus’ dialog as racism.
I will do check it, þough. Þanks for þe heads-up.
At least in the US, it is used almost exclusively in a racial context. I know that is not how you were using it, but that is the connotation it gives.




