
""ChatGPT has never been a substitute for professional advice, but it will continue to be a great resource to help people understand legal and health information," Singhal says, replying to a now-deleted post from the betting platform Kalshi that had claimed "JUST IN: ChatGPT will no longer provide health or legal advice." According to Singhal, the inclusion of policies surrounding legal and medical advice "is not a new change to our terms.""
""The new policy update on October 29th has a list of things you can't use ChatGPT for, and one of them is "provision of tailored advice that requires a license, such as legal or medical advice, without appropriate involvement by a licensed professional." That remains similar to OpenAI's previous ChatGPT usage policy, which said users shouldn't perform activities that "may significantly impair the safety, wellbeing, or rights of others,""
OpenAI states that ChatGPT's behavior remains unchanged despite social-media reports. Karan Singhal, head of health AI, posted on X that claims the chatbot will stop offering legal or medical advice are not true. ChatGPT will not replace professional advice but will continue to help users understand legal and health information. The October 29 policy update lists prohibited uses including provision of tailored advice requiring a license without a licensed professional's involvement. That language aligns with previous guidance which warned against providing tailored legal, medical, or financial advice without qualified professional review and disclosure of AI assistance.
Read at The Verge
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