It's also a common marketing strategy. Make a post or ad with a deliberate error in it and the engagement multiplies tenfold as the world gleefully corrects you (sharing it widely in the process).It's sad how legit this technique is.
It's also a common marketing strategy. Make a post or ad with a deliberate error in it and the engagement multiplies tenfold as the world gleefully corrects you (sharing it widely in the process).It's sad how legit this technique is.
"We'll be proving a lot of stuck up buffoons very, very wrong. Which, trust me, is the very best thing about science."It's sad how legit this technique is.
Well that's the problem isn't it? If you get so used to using LLMs to get information, you start to lose the knowledge that we all used to have of where to go for good information. We used to know this stuff. It's like a skill that's atrophying. You lose the basic ability to look things up because you no longer know how.
Um. No? It’s what I was saying.Uh....that wasn't at all what I was saying.
? All library books are extensively fact-checked.And that experience has, in turn, made me realize that I was probably too trusting of sources in libraries.
Like I said, your understanding of history, moral rights, natural rights and common-law rights is seriously lacking.
It really does, but to concede it would be to concede the point, which you don't seem to be capable of doing.
I think if you could correct me, you'd do so. Instead, you're going with vague hints of how it could be wrong, thus not actually saying anything while trying to dismiss my point.
I think it's more likely that we're not going to get an agreement because one is trying to dance around the issues here rather than engage with them.
Once again, saying things without backing them up. You have no evidence to your claim, so you attempt to demean mine.
But I find this all to be sour grapes. Trying to find some way out of simply recognizing that these laws were for the protection of authors, because without them it would be a harder cost-benefit justification to try and innovate or create.
Perhaps if you read it yourself, you could actually make that distinction that Claude failed to do.
Once again, someone who did not actually read the article.
Perhaps if you weren't so quick to try and ask Claude what it meant, you would actually read the introduction.
The pushback was simply because y'all were looking to discredit the piece without understanding it.
Because y'all didn't even read the intro before you started trying to discredit it.
But I can confidently state I read more than you did because I was concerned with actually engaging with it instead of immediately discrediting it.
You can say "independent conclusion", but seems weird that you and the AI somehow managed to reach the same weird, limited conclusion.
After reviewing this context I am done with this particular conversation.You can say this, but I don't think anyone could read the intro and somehow come to the immediate and wrong conclusion you did. It just comes off as incredibly weird and suspicious, to say the least.

(Dungeons & Dragons)
Rulebook featuring "high magic" options, including a host of new spells.