I know this sounds counterintuitive, who would out themselves? We are all aware of the Temporary policy: ChatGPT is banned. However, this post has to do with the plagiarism aspect of using ChatGPT.
While it is a bannable offense to post content from ChatGPT (the first offense seemingly being a week suspension at the time of writing), it seems we would benefit from discussing the plagiarism involved in posting material from ChatGPT.
Posting entirely from ChatGPT is one thing, and a week suspension is a nice slap on the wrist for that which will hopefully educate users on the policy. However, copy pasting content from another tool without citing it is plagiarism.
Should there also be additional penalties for users plagiarizing ChatGPT, meaning that they posted the content which was not authored by them without citing its source?
For example, let's say I were to include a paragraph from ChatGPT. I asked it to write an example blurb for meta Stack Overflow and it gave me this:
As Stack Overflow continues to grow, effective question tagging is becoming increasingly important. Tagging helps users find the information they need and ensures that experts can quickly locate questions within their area of expertise. -ChatGPT Feb 13 Version.
Shouldn't this be cited (proper or different citation can be debated), as sourced from ChatGPT, in order to avoid plagiarizing the tool or its sources?
OpenAI's user policy does state that it should be, as was also linked in Makoto's answer in the original banning post, https://openai.com/api/policies/sharing-publication/#content-co-authored-with-the-openai-api-policy.
Creators who wish to publish their first-party written content (e.g., a book, compendium of short stories) created in part with the OpenAI API are permitted to do so under the following conditions:
- The published content is attributed to your name or company.
- The role of AI in formulating the content is clearly disclosed in a way that no reader could possibly miss, and that a typical reader would find sufficiently easy to understand.
- Topics of the content do not violate OpenAI’s Content Policy or Terms of Use, e.g., are not related to political campaigns, adult content, spam, hateful content, content that incites violence, or other uses that may cause social harm.
- We kindly ask that you refrain from sharing outputs that may offend others.
Outright 100% reproduction of ChatGPT should still be banned in my opinion.
That said, it seems it is proper to cite this type of content, and it would also make it easier to recognize when posted. Perhaps citing it could also lead to a situation where partial inclusion was perhaps not as problematic as when authors attempt to claim they wrote the entire response.