Yes. There's also a more fundamental issue, behind its use, even if one could assume it always "answered" correctly (which is still far away).
This will tend to make learning "obsolete". People learn to be able to figure out complex things. They spend years learning, sometimes. And they develop an understanding that no quick answer could give them.
These LLM tools promote the "quick answer" approach to every question, rather than learning. People just want a quick answer to some question, and move on.
The consequences are major.
To make a parallel, imagine that instead of going to school and then to uni, for years, you just asked a professor some question when you had one, took the answer, and moved on. Because this is the model we are heading towards.
And let's take EE as an example: many of us have gotten into EE because at some point in the childhood they wanted to understand how some device worked, then another, and then they figured they had to learn.
Learning makes you an independent thinker, over time, and able to devise new things. Just playing questions/answers makes you a fully dependent pawn. What do you want to be?