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  1. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    I think this is reasonable so long as the assumptions hold.
  2. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    Not what my post said
  3. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    Do you have a particular metric in mind? Not sure this is something we can quantify. Generally I think it is ok for books to print things that are false, for internet sites to post things that are false, for people to tell each other things that are false. I don't see a categorical difference...
  4. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    The existence of hallucinations is not surprising at this point ... nor is the fact that people are uncritically trusting it. We saw the same with adoption of the internet. I don't see why it rises to a level where something must be done about the technology, in this case.
  5. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    I suppose everyone does. For me gen AI seems about the same level as Internet access. It seems clearly on the ok side of that line. Yes. There is stuff to be said about free speech but I think most people know what I'll say, so I'll just confirm I'll bite that bullet. (No, I am not asserting...
  6. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    I disagree but I think there is some plausibility to this claim and I don't want to stray into politics, so +1.
  7. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    I don't think this is a great analogy. We aren't relying on the AI the same way we rely on the medical device--we trust the practitioner to use it appropriately. Instead--suppose a doctor buys a vital tracking device from a third party and asks you to wear it. It will get your heart rate, bp...
  8. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    It really all hinges on the first point, it seems to me. If it is actively harmful then I agree it shouldn't be used. But I think it's quite beneficial, so the environmental concerns don't set it apart from any other useful technology.
  9. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    I'm not anti mitigation by any means. But if you can't even get folks to stop eating cheeseburgers...at a certain point it becomes clear the chicken has left the coop, with respect to the environmental criticisms.
  10. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    Frankly, I think the bets are moving on from mitigation at this point. At least in academia, funding decisions, faculty hires, the rhetoric of climate scientists, are all gradually moving towards geoengineering solutions. Based on the amount of forcing and sensitivity of the climate system...
  11. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    Careful. I'm not saying gen AI doesn't have to stand on its own. I'm not saying "those of us who eat meat can't criticize AI". I'm saying that our society makes cost-benefit analyses about energy usage all the time, and that by those standards, gen AI does stand on its own. Yeah, the way...
  12. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    Eh. I think we can do exactly that. A good driver would drive well...a good author will not use their books to spread lies...a good pilot will land the plane successfully. If every lawyer is a bad actor, it doesn't matter what the legal system is.
  13. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    We're still living in the world created by fallout from the printing press. So I'm not sure being 'no different than any other technological development' means 'nothing to worry about'!
  14. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    I think the comparison to drugs is so far off the mark that it probably isn't worth continuing on this topic. I'll just say I find it useful and leave it at that.
  15. The Firebird

    D&D General [rant]The conservatism of D&D fans is exhausting.

    If you make the time meaningful you'll see the same. Maybe the PCs door procedure takes a turn and they get a random monster roll. So they can't use it while fleeing, and don't bother when there isn't a big risk.
  16. The Firebird

    D&D General [rant]The conservatism of D&D fans is exhausting.

    This is exactly how people would behave if put into dangerous scenarios. I always liked this quote: “Having run a couple of schools where CQB was on the menu,” says Justin Dyal, a retired USMC lieutenant colonel, “I think doorway procedures kicked off more heated arguments among instructors...
  17. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    There are significant usages involved. But there are also significant usages for things like meat, which at least in the US is a luxury good. (I mean--the majority of people consume it as a matter of preference and at greater cost for themselves and the environment than the alternatives.) AI at...
  18. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    A lot of people find AI useful for a lot of reasons.
  19. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    If you think that's the entire benefit, there is no number that would satisfy you.
  20. The Firebird

    Judge decides case based on AI-hallucinated case law

    Yes, agreed. This was the publication I had in mind when I wrote that. While promising it is important to note it seems like a setup job in which the physicians were designed to perform poorly to emphasize the success rate of the model. That said, there have been other results in the...
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