The rise of ChatGPT since its launch in November of last year led to much hand-wringing about students using it to write essays and workers phoning it in while A.I. did the real work. July 2023 offers a look at just how useful some people already find the tool and the answer seems to be: very.
The popular chatbot has been experiencing outages over the last day or so, leaving users scrambling and saying they’re struggling to do their homework.
Reports of an outage spiked on Tuesday morning, peaking at 10:40 a.m. with about 5,400 reported crashes, according to the aptly named website Down Detector, which tracks the outages of various websites. A heatmap of the technical difficulties showed they were mostly concentrated in New York City and an area of Kansas that appears close to Wichita.
When Fortune tried to login to ChatGPT, it received an error message reading, “Our systems are a bit busy at the moment, please take a break and try again soon.” When contacted for comment, OpenAI said there were no updates to share at the moment and advised Fortune monitor its status page.
One student—likely struggling to take the aforementioned break—found themselves faced with a deadline right as their trusty A.I. study partner was out of commission.
Why is chatgpt down!??? Broo i have a deadline!!!!!!
— shagun (@upshagunn) July 11, 2023
Several realized they might have to write a paper the old-fashioned way, i.e., with their own critical thinking skills.
OMG ChatGPT @OpenAI is down 😢 Are you telling me I have to start using my own brain again… 😓 pic.twitter.com/L5eqk0A5lv
— Sam Hepburn (@SammyHep) July 11, 2023
ChatGPT down? Ah well back to my useless brain then. pic.twitter.com/HXBPrVPOF1
— Zaid Abdullah (@Zaaid04) July 12, 2023
Chatgpt is down again looks like now I have to use my rusty brain 🥴🥲 pic.twitter.com/oND1xsDf90
— Jules | 🌙 | 🇵🇸 (@LightYagami2ND) July 12, 2023
In January, OpenAI, the company that makes ChatGPT, launched a feature that would spot content written using the tool, after educators complained about the potential for rampant plagiarizing in the classroom. Questions about the tool’s efficacy arose when an author (and longtime proprietor of the blog “AI Weirdness”) found her own book flagged as likely having been written by A.I.
ChatGPT has sparked considerable debate in classrooms. Proponents argue teachers can’t bury their heads in the sand about an emerging technology that will almost certainly become a staple in schools and workplaces, while detractors feel it can stunt critical thinking and encourage shortcuts.
Meanwhile, during the outage some professionals were also loath to return to days before ChatGPT boosted their productivity.
chatgpt down. How can i do my job without it?? RIP lmao
— CryptoFortunex.ben (@CryptoFortunex) July 12, 2023
Husband: What are you doing?
Me: I can’t work.
Husband: Why?
Me: ChatGPT is down.
Husband: I remember the days you could do your job without ChatGPT.
Me: Yeah but now it does it 4x faster which means if ChatGPT goes on break, I go on break. #chatgpt #chatgptdown pic.twitter.com/FdAxfDzuoa— Tania Benade (@taniabenade) July 12, 2023
Despite this user’s claim that ChatGPT has made her “four times faster” at her job, experts believe A.I. will be subject to the “productivity paradox” where the widespread gains in productivity will lag the adoption of the actual technology. One expert says workers are hiding the fact that they use ChatGPT to do their jobs over fears they might get laid off if their boss realized A.I. could do it in their place.
However, generative A.I. aficionados shouldn’t fret too much. There are still plenty of other options available—even if they’re not as buzzy, as one Twitter user points out.
I use Google Bard, when ChatGPT is down
It’s like Pepsi replacement of Coca-Cola of 21st sentry pic.twitter.com/qVxzEcXe8y
— kakaur.eth (@kkr_dav) July 11, 2023
In June, ChatGPT’s website had its first ever month-over-month declines in website traffic—down 9.7%—and unique visitors—down 5.7%, according to data from web analytics company Similarweb.
Analysts’ views varied on the cause. Some argued that the novelty was wearing off, while others again turned ChatGPT’s relevance to students, arguing that summer vacation meant a big chunk of the user base no longer needed the tool.