(no title)
Zr01
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3 months ago
The cynic in me thinks this is just a means to eventually make more money by offering paid unrestricted versions to medical and legal professionals. I'm well-aware that it's not a truth machine, and any output it provides should be verified, checked for references, and treated with due diligence. Yet the same goes for just about any internet search. I don't think some people not knowing how to use it warrants restricting its functionality for the rest of us.
segmondy|3 months ago
miltonlost|3 months ago
You are, but that's not how AI is being marketed by OpenAI, Google, etc. They never mention, in their ads, how much the output needs to be double and triple checked. They say "AI can do what you want! It knows all! It's smarter than PhDs!". Search engines don't say "And this is the truth" in their results, which is not what LLM hypers do.
Zr01|3 months ago
watwut|3 months ago
scarmig|3 months ago
fluidcruft|3 months ago
It's like newsrooms took the advice that passive voice is bad form so they inject OpenAI as the subject instead.
benrapscallion|3 months ago
https://www.theverge.com/podcast/807136/lexisnexis-ceo-sean-...