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tamara_olive | 1 month ago

If this happened to a rector, it shows how normalized it has already become to grab “quotes” off the internet without tracing them back to a primary source. I don’t think this is mainly about AI—it’s the same bad habit that led people to repeat misattributed Einstein lines for years. The difference now is the velocity: LLMs can generate confident-looking citations on demand, so the temptation to skip the source check is higher than ever.

It feels like universities should treat quotes the same way they treat statistics in papers: no citation, no usage. A ten-second verification call or even a quick check in a digital library would have caught this. I’m curious whether schools will start teaching a short “AI hygiene” module for public communications—how to annotate drafts with provenance, how to log which tools were used, etc. The reputational hit from one sloppy speech is probably worse than the hour it takes to verify the material.

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