pdq
Member
- Joined
- 7 Oct 2010
- Messages
- 851
I've noticed a common theme in many of the threads in the Disputes & Prosecutions forum: that our forum experts often suggest tweaks to the English used in responses and requests for information, even down to replacing 'American-izations'. This got me wondering if people with lower levels of literacy are being disadvantaged when it comes to the chances of negotiating out of court settlements, and whether those with a 'way with words' are more likely to achieve this aim.
Short, arrogant, insincere or Chat-GPT generated responses are clearly less likely to illicit a favourable response; but do contributors think that a response that is genuinely remorseful but with less-than-ideal sentence/paragraph structure, grammar and vocabulary may be trumped by one that is potentially less sincere and/or honest, but skilfully crafted?
If so, this worries me, as it could potentially be discriminatory.
Short, arrogant, insincere or Chat-GPT generated responses are clearly less likely to illicit a favourable response; but do contributors think that a response that is genuinely remorseful but with less-than-ideal sentence/paragraph structure, grammar and vocabulary may be trumped by one that is potentially less sincere and/or honest, but skilfully crafted?
If so, this worries me, as it could potentially be discriminatory.