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defrost 19 hours ago

What's being ignored, it seems, is this is explicitly an in-house tool for a first draft summary to be reviewed by an in-house accountant prior to a final presentation to a client.

> imagine it just ignoring a few sentences.

Sure. Just like the risk every such human intern | associate | junior prepared similar draft report already carries today and in the past.

One would hope that as a company at risk of litigation and carrying the can for bad advice that an AI reduced draft such as this would be proof read by a senior expert in house who would trace back every "We'll sell you our company for $100." to the _original_ context via an embedded hyperlink in the draft.

It's certainly the way in which things were done when generating summaries of tens of thousands of documents for mineral and energy clients looking to invest at least $50 million in advancing projects for return.

Neywiny 19 hours ago | parent [-]

You've missed my point. I don't think any human who has a job at a law firm would ignore a sentence like that. I think any AI I've used has ignored explicit instructions of moderate severity. I'm not worried it'll hallucinate things into existence, I'm worried it'll ignore them out. Can't summarize without throwing away words. I don't trust it to choose the right ones.

defrost 6 hours ago | parent [-]

And you've missed mine.

I don't think any human at any law firm, medical practice, major resource company, etc. that deals with volumes of documentation in the course of making multi million deals would _trust_ an associate / intern pool or an AI to create a perfect product that can be passed directly to a client without any form of checking and verification.

It's a _given_ that there will be shortfalls and errors and the procedures need to be sufficient to embrace an error prone distillation phase and a circle back and verify phase.

At least in my experience to date.

It's clear from the article that KPMG feel much the same way.