Attacking journalists for telling you things you don't want to hear says, in your own words, more about the people who are doing that than it says about the information being presented.
I know we're in a post-truth world where journalists are constantly attacked for presenting unpopular...
I also think, though, that there is an opportunity for human-created content to stand out from the slop. People will seek that out, and seek out the creators/brands that they trust. That 'real content' will have value just for being 'real'. But we (creators) have to make sure we are better than...
What an odd reply.
"What is the average salary in Europe?"
Well I know my salary, but that's not really the question being asked, is it? That's of no use to anyone. Of course we all know our own salary. Or what happens in our own games.
Of course he understood it. He was making an informative video to warn users about the nature of AI outputs. People on the news aren't surprised by the news. They know in advance what they're going to say.
Man, there's a lot of weird shooting the messenger vibes going on in this thread.
It's not a philosophical question.
"Can AI lie?" is just shorthand for "Can AI output false information?" The answer is yes, and banging on about the word 'lie' is just a distraction--bordering on misdirection--from the actual conversation, and the purpose of the video--to alert users to this...
Then its feelings can't be hurt. The verbiage is obviously chosen to get attention, and isn't the point.
If it can 'run' a TTRPG or 'write' a poem or 'answer' a question, or 'apologise', it can 'lie'. Technically in can do none of these things (or all of them). The semantics are distracting...
For those claiming that AI slop is an unfair description, just watch how ChatGPT faked a transcript of a podcast which had not yet been uploaded and then doubled down and gaslit the reporter and insisted he had uploaded it and that this was an accurate transcript. It was, of course, completely...
Presumably if everybody had to eat humans, then the population would halve every month or so (assuming one human is enough to feed one human for one month).
10B
5B
2.5B
1.25B
65M
33M
16M
8M
4M
2M
1M
500K
So the population would be down from 10B to 500K in one year. A whole planet down to one...
Yeah. You see it everywhere. Box office figures, mobile phone brands, D&D editions, etc. To be fair, it's not like I don't feed into it by maintaining a million dollar kickstarter club list, so I guess I can't really complain.
Nah, that thing is cardboard. I do have a metal
One which lights up and makes noises, but I don’t think I’d risk taking it out on Halloween. I’d only break it or lose it.