Deepwater Asset Management managing partner Gene Munster is astonished at the widespread use of artificial intelligence among high school students for cheating but had his take on the issue that fetched a nod from Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk.
What Happened: On Monday, Munster took to X, formerly Twitter, and noted that while cheating has always been around, the rate of efficiency of it “exponentially increasing with generative AI.”
He then shared his insights after talking to one high school student and it included the usage of AI in writing papers which Munster deemed “out of control,” lack of concerns surrounding AI hallucinations, reduced time spent on homework, students finding workarounds to use platforms like ChatGPT and different perception toward what can be called cheating.
Munster also acknowledged that high-school students ...