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Main Authors: Tchatchoua, Nadine Sandjo, Harper, Richard
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.07393
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author Tchatchoua, Nadine Sandjo
Harper, Richard
author_facet Tchatchoua, Nadine Sandjo
Harper, Richard
contents In November 2022, Europe and the world by and large were stunned by the birth of a new large language model : ChatGPT. Ever since then, both academic and populist discussions have taken place in various public spheres such as LinkedIn and X(formerly known as Twitter) with the view to both understand the tool and its benefits for the society. The views of real actors in professional spaces, especially in regulated industries such as finance and law have been largely missing. We aim to begin to close this gap by presenting results from an empirical investigation conducted through interviews with professional actors in the Fintech industry. The paper asks the question, how and to what extent are large language models in general and ChatGPT in particular being adopted and used in the Fintech industry? The results show that while the fintech experts we spoke with see a potential in using large language models in the future, a lot of questions marks remain concerning how they are policed and therefore might be adopted in a regulated industry such as Fintech. This paper aims to add to the existing academic discussing around large language models, with a contribution to our understanding of professional viewpoints.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2505_07393
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle AI in Money Matters
Tchatchoua, Nadine Sandjo
Harper, Richard
Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
In November 2022, Europe and the world by and large were stunned by the birth of a new large language model : ChatGPT. Ever since then, both academic and populist discussions have taken place in various public spheres such as LinkedIn and X(formerly known as Twitter) with the view to both understand the tool and its benefits for the society. The views of real actors in professional spaces, especially in regulated industries such as finance and law have been largely missing. We aim to begin to close this gap by presenting results from an empirical investigation conducted through interviews with professional actors in the Fintech industry. The paper asks the question, how and to what extent are large language models in general and ChatGPT in particular being adopted and used in the Fintech industry? The results show that while the fintech experts we spoke with see a potential in using large language models in the future, a lot of questions marks remain concerning how they are policed and therefore might be adopted in a regulated industry such as Fintech. This paper aims to add to the existing academic discussing around large language models, with a contribution to our understanding of professional viewpoints.
title AI in Money Matters
topic Computers and Society
Artificial Intelligence
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2505.07393