In "Challenging The Myths of Generative AI"[1] Eryk Salvaggio mentions what he calls the productivity myth, saying, "The productivity myth suggests that anything we spend time on is up for automation — that any time we spend can and should be freed up for the sake of having even more time for other activities or pursuits — which can also be automated. The importance and value of thinking about our work and why we do it is waved away as a distraction. The goal of writing, this myth suggests, is filling a page rather than the process of thought that a completed page represents."<p>1 <a href="https://www.techpolicy.press/challenging-the-myths-of-generative-ai/" rel="nofollow">https://www.techpolicy.press/challenging-the-myths-of-genera...</a>
> The quality of the answers you get depends on the quality of your prompts, which depends on how well you know the topic.<p>To add, ability to judge the quality of an answer from an LLM also depends our your own expertise in the area. So to put simply to avoid harms of LLMs you need to be already experienced in that topic.