College students who have reportedly grown too dependent on ChatGPT are starting to face consequences after graduating and joining the workforce for placing too much trust in chatbots.

Last month, a recent law school graduate lost his job after using ChatGPT to help draft a court filing that ended up being riddled with errors.

The consequences arrived after a court in Utah ordered sanctions after the filing included the first fake citation ever discovered in the state hallucinated by artificial intelligence.

Also problematic, the Utah court found that the filing included "multiple" mis-cited cases, in addition to "at least one case that does not appear to exist in any legal database (and could only be found in ChatGPT."

Douglas Durbano, a lawyer involved in the filing, and Richard

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