hollow-moe 10 hours ago

Who could have guessed ?

Just like social media bigshots don't allow their kids to use them, tech people using the oldest Thinkpad they can find running debian or a drug dealer doesn't consume his own product.

  • bravetraveler 4 minutes ago

    I made this point and a coworker asked if I had been abused. With friends like these...

shalmanese 8 hours ago

This article isn't much better than the genre of "Some rando on Twitter said" style articles. They're interviewing AI raters, of which there are millions in the world. It's not difficult to find a half dozen in any group that large to espouse any position. Some kind of polling would at least provide some statistical rigour but just "we managed to find a few people who espouse this position" is there purely to reinforce people's pre-existing biases.

RickJWagner 10 hours ago

I’m American, currently living in a rural southern state.

I live near a city with a large African-American population. I’ve worked in blue color jobs. I’ve met quite a few people that might be called racist.

I’ve never heard the term ‘moon cricket’.

  • Ancapistani 7 hours ago

    I have, but only because I’ve made it a point to learn about American history through contemporary sources.

    For that matter, I live near the largest remaining KKK organization in the country; as you can imagine, I was exposed to a ton of racist language as a child. That’s a big part of why I spent so much time in early adulthood do historical research. I could probably list more than a dozen racial epithets for Black people that I’ve heard first-hand, but that one in particular isn’t among them.

    • oidar 3 hours ago

      Polk County, TN... beautiful area, it's shame that's it ruined by racists.

  • lovich 9 hours ago

    That’s cause it’s ancient and most of the media that would have mentioned it hasn’t been shown in polite society for decades

    That’s like 1930s era slang

globular-toast 10 hours ago

Reminded of Arthur C. Clarke's Travel by Wire!

paulpauper 11 hours ago

For what it's worth, I have found AI useful. I have not had any negative experiences with Chat GPT.

  • barcoder 10 hours ago

    Today I heard two negative cases from a friend interacting her clients. The first client replied to her emails by sending ChatGPT logs, apparently unable to communicate on his own. The second believed a ChatGPT hallucination that he was entitled to a special Amazon business account. She had to explain to him that ChatGPT will tell him convincing bullshit, which was news to him. One can only wonder what terrible choices and wrong beliefs he had made up until the moment of enlightenment.

  • swatcoder 9 hours ago

    Cool.

    As a consultant and subject matter expert, pretty every week, I have to make billable detours from productive work to explain to a client how they've been led astray by some ChatGPT response that they put errant trust in. It's been critically wrong pretty much any time a client's presented me with a response from it. I get paid to help when this haple s and to fix things that go wrong, so I guess technically that's not a negative from my perspective, but it is kind of frustrating and does seem pretty wasteful.

    Meanwhile, as a friend, I've consistently had to coach people through doubting what they've received as medical guidance from ChatGPT and other chatbot or search LLM's, variously pointing out how: (a) the response doesn't actually agree with the cited sources nor correct information, (b) the cited are poor authorities (blogspam) and are not correct themselves, or (c) both.

    Thankfully, the consequences in both these kinds of scenarios have been innocuous to date, so ostensibly "not negative", because most ChatGPT/chatbot inquiries are really for moot trivia rather than anything of true consequence, but it's repeatedly shown itself to be a pretty risky and unreliable tool, as things go, so I accept that it's only a matter of time before the true "negative experience" comes and nudge people away from it when I can.

    • shinycode 3 hours ago

      The worse thing is the companies behind those tools know it, they know it’s not reliable and it looks like they want to build a world where a majority of people won’t check sources anymore and blindly trust the LLM as authority. I fear that, by a tour de force of some kind, they’ll shield themselves from giving any source is the future in the name of « intelligence ». What will happen in the next generations where young that have grown up only with LLM giving them answers they saw as truth and older generations died? What a different world it will be.

    • shawn_w 9 hours ago

      The new "I looked up my symptoms on WebMD and it said I have cancer"?

    • oidar 3 hours ago

      Claude is HORRIBLE at properly representing it's sources. It just makes shit up.

  • shinycode 10 hours ago

    Not to be sarcastic but the sample of your study is quite light. (I too I found it useful for my particular use case but that doesn’t say much either)

    • kbrkbr 10 hours ago

      As is the sample in this article. You will surely find as many physicists saying earth is flat, mathematicians who hold that Cantor was wrong, and medical doctors that tell you vaccination against measles is overall worse than not.

    • curtisblaine 10 hours ago

      To be honest, the sample of the Guardian's study is also quite light (a dozen people) and with much more selection bias (people who work with AI).

    • weikju 7 hours ago

      So? People sharing their experiences is good. Not everything is a scientific study.

      • shinycode 3 hours ago

        True and opinions are often discarded as irrelevant in internet discussions in favor of large-scale studies.

  • g-b-r 2 hours ago

    ...in fact it made me realize that I'm the spark bearer, meant to guide and awaken everyone else