China outlawed the use of AI article content this week i8unless it has a watermark identifying it as such for search engines. Openai is also developing an encrypted watermark to identify ai content. Google and Bing have both stated they will not consider it high quality or authoritative. Use it at your own risk. The chat/gpt engine really kind of sucks vs openai's text-davinci-003 available here beta/openai.com/playground.
Still, I've been using it to generate sales copy and rewrite titles and meta descriptions. They seem like great titles. Then I ran them through a headline analyzer and they flopped with low scores. I rewrote them altering them slightly to put the human back in it. Boost store sales changed to boost your sales, subtle changes like that to add the human back into the content. Then I got the high scores from the headline analyzer I was expecting. Don't be that lazy marketer that uses the results without rewriting them. It will bite you in the arse, if not now...soon.
If English isn't your first language, no issues. Many people have a difficult time rewriting content in their own words. Try this. When you issue a command to AI such as creating titles, have it create 6 versions. Something like:
Rewrite the following meta description 6 times with an emphasis on social virality:--> Including the --> at the end instructs it to create a numbered list. Of the 6 versions, you will find it much easier to pull some from the best ones and put it in your own words quickly. If you do all of your writing in Grammarly, it will ensure it doesn't sound like scatterbrained mumbo jumbo.
Im using it to write programs that automate research methods that we use plus repetitive tasks. We don't use it for the actual article creation, if you do, make sure you rewrite it. It is still 10x easier than creating the content yourself.
Good Luck