ABC News article warning about all the risks of using/allowing AI notetakers - and they don't even mention AI errors
which can include the AI inventing people who weren't at and things that were never during meetings.
But there are plenty of things that can go wrong with AI notetakers even if somehow, against all odds, they manage to transcribe and summarize a meeting absolutely perfectly, with no hallucinations or omissions.
https://abcnews.com/Technology/wireStory/ai-notetakers-promise-easy-meeting-recaps-professionals-question-134621941
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But the way popular AI notetakers accomplish those tasks makes some people avoid using them. The technology turns everything said during meetings into data. Confidential personnel information, corporate strategies, trade secrets and remarks that could later be seen as incriminating all of it could end up in the wrong hands.
There are huge risks to the organization on AI notetakers, Amy Dufrane, the chief executive of human resources training and certification provider HRCI, said. I dont think companies should use it at all.
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Chief among them is uncertainty about where the collected data is stored and for how long. Privacy advocates worry the companies behind the AI notetakers are creating voiceprints without consent. Voiceprints a type of biometric profile similar to a fingerprint but tuned to the unique intonations and characteristics of ones voice can be used to access restricted or confidential information, including the contents of bank accounts.
Some tech companies resell data from the notetaking tools they created or use confidential meeting transcripts and recordings to train their AI models. Theres also the risk that conversations between an attorney and client could become fair game in legal proceedings; a New York federal judge in February ordered a criminal defendant to provide prosecutors with documents he created for his lawyers because it already had been shared with a third party, which was Anthropic's Claude.
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