CU faculty, staff and students push back against university-controlled AI rollout
Source: Colorado Public Radio
Hundreds of faculty members, students and staff across University of Colorado campuses are pushing back against a new OpenAI system launching March 31.
In February, the university entered a $2 million-a-year agreement for three years to provide ChatGPT Edu across the system to more than 100,000 students, staff and faculty.
Hundreds have signed a letter of dissent arguing that the rollout lacked transparency and technical oversight. Others say campus leaders havent adequately addressed concerns about student privacy, academic integrity, corporate influence and environmental sustainability.
Faculty on CU Denver and Boulder campuses say the decision was reached without consulting campus experts in AI, ethics or education.
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Read more: https://www.cpr.org/2026/03/09/cu-ai-rollout/
generalbetrayus
(1,772 posts)and I was only vaguely aware of this issue and definitely not of the controversy around it. I know faculty at other institutions who are very wary of the use of AI by their students in general. In any event, I'm not particularly surprised that faculty on CU Denver and Boulder campuses say the AI decision was reached without consulting campus experts in AI, ethics, or education.
highplainsdem
(61,542 posts)https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143473861
I found this article about CU, though, thanks to a Bluesky account I recommended in GD yesterday:
There's a great account on Bluesky that I think DUers will enjoy, even though you'll have to read his posts there
https://www.democraticunderground.com/100221081716
I was very glad to read about the pushback at CU.