▲ | larodi 4 days ago | |||||||
In a world where a daily dose of amphetamines is just right for millions of people, this somehow cant be that surprising... | ||||||||
▲ | smt88 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Different amphetamines have wildly different side effects. Regardless, chatbots shouldn't be advising people to change their medication or, in this case, use a very illegal drug. | ||||||||
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▲ | rkozik1989 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
You do know that amphetamines have a different effect on the people who need them and the people who use the recreationally, right? For those of us with ADHD their effects are soothing and calming. I literally took 20mg after having to wait 2 days for prescriptions to fill and went straight to bed for 12 hours. Stop spreading misinformation about the medications people like me need to function the way you take for granted. | ||||||||
▲ | Spivak 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
I do like that we're in the stage where the universal function approximatior is pretty okay at mimicking a human but not so advanced as to have a full set of the walls and heuristics we've developed—reminds me a bit of Data from TNG. Naive, sure, but a human wouldn't ever say "logically.. the best course of action would be a small dose of meth administered as needed" even if it would help given the situation. It feels like the kind of advice a former addict would give someone looking to quit—"Look man, you're going to be in a worse place if you lose your job because you can't function without it right now, take a small hit when it starts to get bad and try to make the hits smaller over time." |