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everdrive 4 days ago

>Agent, I need some vitamin D, can you find me the best deal for some rated in the top 5?

"I have picked the best reviewed vitamin D on Amazon."

(and, it's a knockoff in the mixed inventory, and now you're getting lead-laced nothing)

mh- 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

Supposing I accept that's a likely outcome, it's exactly the same thing that would have happened if a typical human shopper searched for Vitamin D and picked the top result, right?

The cynicism on these topics is getting exhausting.

disgruntledphd2 4 days ago | parent | next [-]

> Supposing I accept that's a likely outcome, it's exactly the same thing that would have happened if a typical human shopper searched for Vitamin D and picked the top result, right?

Yeah sure, but humans (normally) only fall for a particular scam once. Because LLMs have no memory, they can scale these scams much more effectively!

red-iron-pine 4 days ago | parent [-]

and don't forget the one-day-of-entire-nation-of-bolivia tier electricity consumption just to get those dubious scans done

everdrive 4 days ago | parent | prev [-]

- It would be a more repeatable failure

- it could be gamed by companies in a new way

- it requires an incredibly energy-intensive backend just to prevent people from making a note on a scrap of paper

fragmede 4 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Not to out myself as, like, a total communist, or something, but I think there should be government regulations preventing lead-laced Vitamin D pills with no Vitamin D in them from being sold.

dumbfounder 4 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Yes, if it’s bad it will do that. I can see a path to it being good.