Luyện nói tiếng Anh bằng Shadowing qua video: B2 Level Discussion! Words, Listening and Debate | The Problem With AI Slop

B2
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Hey, everybody.
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Welcome back to High Level Listening.
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Today's lesson is for those of you who are ready to move beyond everyday small talk and start having more real,
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modern, and slightly deeper conversations in English,
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especially if you're in the B1 level and you really want to push through and achieve that B2.
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Yeah, that's exactly what we're working on today.
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This is a B2 level conversation,
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which means you'll hear more nuanced opinions,
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more specific vocabulary, and maybe some ideas that are a bit more complex or abstract.
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But this will still be a natural conversation.
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And we think this is a great way to pick up new words
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and phrases about topical issues with subtitles and captions to help you,
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plus the chance to pause,
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rewind and listen again so you don't get lost.
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We also have all of our B2 level conversation study guides
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that will help you stretch from small talk to deeper topics
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in our conversational English study guide in the link in the description below.
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That has PDF transcripts, dictionaries,
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and so you can really feel confident in today's lesson.
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Yes, so today's topic is something that everyone is talking about right now.
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It's AI, artificial intelligence.
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And we'll also cover AI-generated content.
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Yeah, it's funny, kind of over the past couple of years,
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I think there's been a lot of confusion in kind of the generic name AI.
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And there's definitely been a shift in the way that most people use the word in day-to-day language.
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It's starting to be more of an umbrella term
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or kind of a catch-all phrase for all sorts of words and technology that we've used in the past,
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even if those things aren't actually AI.
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Words like CGI and computer animation,
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you know, kind of like the computer graphics.
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Some styles of cartoons, drawings and styles are also being called AI,
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even if a real person manually or physically created them.
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Yes, I know what you mean.
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It's taking over the phrase.
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When we looked at a photo that had been changed or manipulated,
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we used to say, oh,
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it's Photoshopped or someone Photoshopped this.
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But nowadays, I think people say, oh, it's AI.
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Oh, that's just AI.
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It's fake.
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yeah and another example is chatbots
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if you need help from your bank your phone company
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and you need to talk to someone you probably won't chat to a real person you'll chat to AI
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or to say oh they've replaced the customer service team with AI oh I talked to the AI
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and it didn't help me so it's replacing everything I know it's kind of weird it's
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so the the term AI just kind of has lots of different meanings now.
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Even anything that's fake on the internet,
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fake news, disinformation, misinformation, people are in general,
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they're just calling it AI or my new favorite phrase from the past couple of years, AI slop.
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And you might have seen this as a comment.
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Is this real or is this more AI slop?
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Yeah, slop is that low quality,
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obviously AI slop videos, pictures.
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So yeah, there's obviously a lot of negativity around AI.
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And we'll dive deeper into that topic and talk about AI-generated content or the slop.
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And yeah, we've structured today.
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So we'll start with sharing real experiences.
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And then we'll talk about if we agree or disagree with opinions we've heard with a little debate.
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And then share some deeper insights with articles that we've read.
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And by the end, hopefully you'll feel a bit more confident discussing this topic naturally using B2 level English.
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Okay, so we're going to start by sharing some of our own opinions.
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We were talking about this with a couple of friends the other day,
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and one of them made a really interesting point that kind of stuck with me.
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She said that it's getting harder to tell what's real anymore.
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It's getting harder to tell what's real anymore.
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and that really succinctly captured something I think a lot of people are starting to notice.
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She explained a little bit more that when she scrolls online now,
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everything feels slightly off, like it's been polished and optimized,
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but not genuinely thought through or the details are a little off.
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It's not obviously bad, like maybe the very first look,
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but it doesn't really feel fully authentic either.
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She kind of went on to say that she'll read a post
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or watch a video that sounds and looks really convincing at first,
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but then it kind of falls apart the more you think about it or the more you look at it.
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The ideas are there again,
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the big picture is there.
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The structure is there, but there's no real depth behind it.
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And it's something kind of creepy,
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a little bit weird, maybe even awkward.
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And nothing really makes it memorable or worth coming back to.
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It's just there.
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It just exists.
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It feels generic, kind of repetitive and kind of hollow in a way, really empty.
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Like it's been generated for the sole purpose to imitate rather than actually provide information or education.
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I think she kind of described it as a constant stream of content that looks good on the surface,
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but really lacks substance underneath.
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Yes, there is a name,
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I remember, for that feeling when you watch something that's robotic or fake or digital,
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and that strange feeling you get,
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it's called the uncanny valley.
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Oh, that's what that means real okay yeah
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but you know it's not something's wrong something's missing like
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when they make it I don't know what it is I can't pinpoint it exactly okay uncanny uncanny valley yeah
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that feeling but yeah uh if we're talking about pictures and
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and images uh videos especially they're not perfect
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but they're already convincing enough to trick a lot of people including my mom and the older generation.
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My mum sends me videos with lots of laughing emojis,
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and the videos she sends me are blatantly AI.
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There's artifacts in the videos.
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Artifacts are those like glitches where somebody's got six fingers on one hand,
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and she sent me one of all these cats in someone's bed,
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and there's a cat with two heads,
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and there's a cat that's extremely large compared to the other ones,
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I think you sent it to me and she's petting it the wrong way as well.
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Yeah, right.
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So there's all these giveaways or these little artifacts or glitches.
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But to the untrained eye or just at a glance, it's real enough.
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And when people are scrolling on their phones,
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they just look for a few seconds anyway.
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And yeah, it's only when you look closer that you start to see the weird glitches.
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And that's fine when it's just an innocent, silly video.
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but I think with older people it's only going to get worse.
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It worries me about my mum because if that fools her and it's quite rudimentary now,
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as AI gets more and more sophisticated,
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more lifelike and more believable,
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she will have no idea if what she's seeing is real or not.
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And even I'm starting to struggle with some things as well.
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Even with the news.
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I remember there was some news in Mexico recently of an airport on fire.
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That was fake.
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It wasn't a real video,
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but enough people believed it for it to circulate through news channels and caused panic.
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And it's only going to get worse as AI evolves and gets even better.
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So yeah, I like to think of myself as someone who can spot AI pretty easily.
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But even for me, I'm starting to doubt myself and it's starting to get harder.
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So yeah, I agree.
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It's getting harder to tell what's real anymore.
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So our second point that we kind of wanted to make was that people are overreacting.
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AI is just a tool.
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So it just really depends on how it's being used.
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Yeah.
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So again, we were talking about this with our friend and he had a slightly different perspective.
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It's worth mentioning that this comes up quite a lot in these discussions.
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He basically argued that people are overreacting and it's just a tool.
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It is something to assist you and help you.
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If people are using it to produce low quality content,
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then it's not really the fault of the technology,
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but it's the person using it.
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And he said that it can also be quite helpful in certain contexts,
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like you can use AI to summarize information,
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to improve clarity if you're writing something,
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or help you organize your thoughts if you're trying to plan something,
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which I think is a fair point.
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I do have a friend who works as a software developer and he uses AI as well,
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but he embraces it as a tool.
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It helps him code faster,
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but he still has to supervise it because the AI still makes mistakes.
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So he's kind of got the best of both worlds.
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He's got the speed of the AI and he's got his own expertise.
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And importantly, it hasn't made him obsolete.
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He hasn't lost his job because AI has taken it from him.
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His knowledge is still critical.
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I kind of see that,
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but at the same time,
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that's really mostly talking about the ones that are language models, right?
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Like ChatGPT and Claude, right?
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These are language models.
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They're helping you interpret data,
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summarize things, and help you speak more succinctly.
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Okay, but it does feel like it oversimplifies what's actually happening
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because the issue isn't just out the occasional user using ChatGPT for fun
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or to summarize an email or a small business owner creating a post
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or a social media post or something that benefits their small business.
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What's really changed is the sheer volume and the speed at which this content is now being produced.
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Nobody's fact checking.
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Nobody's looking back to make sure that things are correct.
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And a lot of it isn't really created to help the small business owner or help somebody in their job.
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It's just meant to capture your attention.
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It's clickbait, right?
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So like, for instance, especially like in our job,
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if you search something like B2 Level English on the YouTube search,
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and you get search results that are pretty much 90 to 95% AI generated content with faceless videos,
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AI generated pictures, and then on top of that,
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AI generated voiceovers with zero real people involved.
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And is that what people really want?
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I mean, maybe a couple of those videos were popular at the beginning,
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but do some people even realize that these people aren't real at all?
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A lot of them are realistic photos.
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Even the voiceover sounds okay.
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And I bet if you're a non-native speaker,
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you would hear it and think,
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oh, maybe that's a real person.
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But they're not.
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I probably wouldn't notice if I wasn't currently aware of how much these videos are taking over the internet.
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yeah i agree i think
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that is a great example of the slop as well slop isn't just low quality
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but it's an incredible volume
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and a huge amount of videos like there are channels posting 10 videos every day
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because you can just generate slop like it's just coming out of a pipe
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and yeah i agree i I don't like it
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when AI content is given the same platform as real people doing real work that's completely authentic.
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So yeah, I guess you can try and control what you consume.
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But how much responsibility can I have when I swipe to another video?
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I have no idea if it's going to be real or AI.
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I can't choose what goes on my feed.
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So I don't like that.
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Yeah, a lot of big platforms of prioritizing AI equal to real creators.
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Okay, so to dig a little bit deeper,
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we're going to bring in some articles and things that we've read.
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This finally leads us into what was probably the most interesting point that someone brought up,
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which is that it isn't just about content quality, okay?
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It's not just about these little pictures and personal usage, right?
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It's about how it's starting to affect the way that we think.
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One of our more tech-savvy friends mentioned that when you're constantly exposed to this fast,
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simplified, and slightly superficial content,
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your expectations start to shift.
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You start to lose your tolerance for anything that requires deeper focus
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or sustained attention because your brain becomes used to these quick,
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easily digestible, easily creatable information, right?
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It felt like a subtle change at first,
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but I think it really has a huge impact over time.
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Now, I can say that I've definitely noticed that in myself personally,
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especially when I try to read something more detailed or complex.
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There's kind of this impulse to skim it,
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just kind of skip ahead or just move on entirely,
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just swipe through entirely.
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Or worse, just use ChatGPT to summarize the information.
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Almost every email platform has its own AI that will summarize information for you.
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Now, I recently read this article in Time Magazine where they were reviewing a study done by MIT.
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And basically what happened is they took a group of people ages 18 to 40
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and split them into three groups to write a very formal style SAT exam.
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That's kind of our high school exam that goes into college.
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One group used ChatGPT, one used Google search,
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and one used nothing at all.
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And MIT researchers found, and I quote,
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that of the three groups,
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ChatGPT users had the lowest brain engagement and,
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get this, consistently underperformed at neural, linguistic, and behavioral levels.
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They went on to say that over the course of several months,
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ChatGPT users got lazier with each subsequent essay,
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often resorting to copy and paste by the end of the study.
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Ouch.
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And in just a few months, right?
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I mean, ChatGPT, we've been using that for a couple of years now.
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Imagine what it's doing to students who are even younger than us.
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I mean, I'm already getting a little lazy.
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Imagine what it's doing to students and people with no work ethic at all.
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Yeah, clearly people starting to use it as a crutch,
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something they can rely on.
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Why do all the thinking when the AI can think for me. For me.
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Yeah, right.
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And I guess our brains are always looking for the laziest,
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most efficient route to do things.
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We call it efficiency, don't we?
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Right.
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Yeah.
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That's what I call it.
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I call it efficiency, but maybe it's being lazy.
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Right.
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Yeah.
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It is slightly concerning to think if you're at school and you need to be developing your critical thinking skills,
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you need to engage with your own thoughts,
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not be spoon fed things.
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But yeah, I can criticize it all I like,
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but it's already affecting me.
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I'm becoming more impatient in terms of doing research.
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Sometimes I'll search for something in Google and if I don't get the answer immediately from Gemini,
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ChatGPT, I'm like, oh, now I have to sift through lots of different links on Google.
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It feels like such a chore to go out and do my own research.
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So my tolerance for this deeper focus and sustained focus has definitely been lowered.
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I know I can just ask ChatGPT or Gemini,
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get an answer instantly, even if it's not perfect.
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And then what's worse is that I've noticed that even the prompts that I write,
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the sort of questions I ask ChatGPT,
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those are getting simpler and lazier as well.
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I remember when I first tried ChatGPT,
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I would really like hold its hand and say,
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alter the image so that the people are more realistic with wrinkles
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and textures on their clothes but after using it for
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so long and realizing how capable it is I just say make it more real
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and it just does it so it's even affecting the way I talk to the AI is getting lazier because
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sometimes I don't even correct spelling mistakes and it still gets what I mean which is as impressive as it is terrifying.
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I think the other thing that's affecting the way I think is also affecting my vocabulary.
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There are definitely words that I keep seeing from AI
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and now I think they're starting to enter the lexicon generally as well.
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So the word game changer comes up all the time now
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because AI seems to use it a lot and I think people read it and then they start using it as well.
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So I start seeing and reading it in articles.
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And it makes me doubt whether it's written by a real person or whether it's AI.
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Delve is another word that I didn't hear that often.
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Then AI came out.
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And then suddenly I see delve and dive into topics.
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I see it in articles and in posts everywhere.
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So it's even affecting the way we communicate,
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or at least the way I do.
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It's crazy.
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Is AI affecting us or are we affecting AI?
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I guess that's the big question now at the end of the day.
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So there you have it.
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There are definitely a lot of different perspectives on this and
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that it's exactly what makes it such a good topic for our B2 conversation at this level.
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Yeah, let us know what you think in the comments.
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You don't need to express yourself perfectly,
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but just try sharing your own experiences with AI or tell us
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if you feel the same way as we do or
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if you agree with any of the opinions you had in this video.
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Yeah, and if you're tired of all the AI slop,
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thank you for listening and studying with us here today.
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We are absolutely real people.
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Look, we have all 10 fingers.
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AI can't do this.
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AI can't do this, no. So we'll see you very soon for another episode here on High Level Listening.
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Bye-bye.
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Thank you.

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Phổ biến

Thông Tin Về Bài Học Này

Bài học hôm nay tập trung vào việc giúp bạn nâng cao khả năng giao tiếp tiếng Anh của mình từ mức B1 lên B2. Chúng ta sẽ tiến xa hơn những cuộc trò chuyện hàng ngày và bắt đầu thảo luận về những chủ đề hiện đại và phức tạp như trí tuệ nhân tạo (AI). Bài học sẽ bao gồm từ vựng phong phú và các ý kiến sắc bén, cung cấp cho bạn cơ hội thực hành nghe và nói với các phụ đề đi kèm. Bạn sẽ có thể dừng lại, tua lại và lắng nghe lại để luyện nghe nói qua video một cách hiệu quả và tự tin hơn.

Từ Vựng & Cụm Từ Quan Trọng

  • Trí tuệ nhân tạo (AI): Công nghệ cho phép máy móc thực hiện các tác vụ thông minh.
  • Nội dung do AI tạo ra: Thông tin được sản xuất bằng phần mềm trí tuệ nhân tạo.
  • CGI: Đồ họa máy tính được sử dụng trong phim hoặc trò chơi.
  • Chatbot: Phần mềm giao tiếp tự động với người dùng thông qua văn bản.
  • Thông tin sai lệch: Thông tin không chính xác hoặc giả mạo được phát tán.
  • AI slop: Thuật ngữ để chỉ các nội dung kém chất lượng tạo ra bởi AI.

Mẹo Thực Hành

Khi thực hành phần mềm shadowing với bài học này, hãy chú ý đến tốc độ và ngữ điệu của người nói. Đặt mục tiêu bắt chước không chỉ phát âm mà còn cả cảm xúc và phong cách giao tiếp của họ. Bạn có thể sử dụng các đoạn video để luyện nghe nói qua video, dừng lại và nhắc lại những câu nói mà bạn thấy khó khăn. Việc này sẽ giúp bạn cải thiện phát âm tiếng Anh chuẩn và tăng thêm tự tin khi giao tiếp. Nếu có thời gian, hãy nghe lại nhiều lần, và thử giao tiếp bằng cách tạo ra những câu hỏi hoặc bình luận dựa trên các chủ đề đã học để củng cố khả năng phân tích và suy nghĩ bằng tiếng Anh.

Phương Pháp Shadowing Là Gì?

Shadowing là kỹ thuật học ngôn ngữ có cơ sở khoa học, ban đầu được phát triển cho chương trình đào tạo phiên dịch viên chuyên nghiệp và được phổ biến rộng rãi bởi nhà đa ngôn ngữ học Dr. Alexander Arguelles. Nguyên lý cốt lõi đơn giản nhưng cực kỳ hiệu quả: bạn nghe tiếng Anh của người bản xứ và lặp lại to ngay lập tức — như một "cái bóng" (shadow) đuổi theo người nói với độ trễ chỉ 1–2 giây. Khác với luyện ngữ pháp hay học từ vựng bị động, Shadowing buộc não bộ và cơ miệng phải đồng thời xử lý và tái tạo ngôn ngữ thực tế. Các nghiên cứu khoa học xác nhận phương pháp này cải thiện đáng kể phát âm, ngữ điệu, nhịp điệu, nối âm, kỹ năng nghe và độ lưu loát khi nói — đặc biệt hiệu quả cho người luyện IELTS Speaking và muốn giao tiếp tiếng Anh tự nhiên như người bản ngữ.