ChatGPT did not cure a dog's cancer
Briefly

ChatGPT did not cure a dog's cancer
"When an Australian tech entrepreneur with no background in biology or medicine said ChatGPT helped save his dog from cancer, the story couldn't help but spread. It's the kind of validation Big Tech has long craved: proof that AI will revolutionize medicine and take on one of its deadliest diseases. The reality, as usual, is more complicated."
"Conyngham said he used ChatGPT to brainstorm treatment ideas. The chatbot surfaced immunotherapy as an option and pointed him toward experts at the University of New South Wales, who then genetically profiled Rosie's cancer. He then used ChatGPT and Google's protein structure AI model AlphaFold to help make sense of the results."
A Sydney-based tech entrepreneur named Paul Conyngham reported that ChatGPT helped save his dog Rosie from cancer after conventional chemotherapy failed. The story, initially reported by The Australian, became widely circulated as validation that AI could revolutionize medicine. Conyngham claimed he used ChatGPT to brainstorm treatment options, which led him to immunotherapy and researchers at the University of New South Wales. He then collaborated with UNSW professor Pall Thordarson to genetically profile Rosie's cancer and develop a personalized mRNA vaccine using AI tools including AlphaFold. However, the actual scientific reality behind this narrative proved considerably more complicated than the simplified version that spread online.
Read at The Verge
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