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| ▲ | ipaddr 2 days ago | parent | next [-] |
| I don't understand the crowd who uses Claude. Why? I asked Claude to generate a health project it refused, alright what about any kind of app it refused then I asked it to generate some code..any code. It refused. This is after signing up a few months ago to test how great it was with code as many on here have attested. People are claimed perhaps you fell into a bad a/b test. Anything is possible. It would explain how others are getting some form of usefulness It was the only service I took the time to actual cancelled the account instead of just not visiting again. |
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| ▲ | jilles 2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| I fed the same prompt to Deepseek: By 2025, the integration of AI has become so seamless that its practically invisible, operating as the central nervous system for everything from urban infrastructure to personalized healthcare. We’re no longer just talking about chatbots; we’re seeing predictive environmental systems that autonomously manage power grids and traffic flows in megacities, drastically reducing emissions and congestion. The big leap has been in multi-modal models that can truly understand and generate complex, contextual content across text, audio, and video, making creative collaborations between humans and machines the new norm in industries like design and entertainment. Its a shift from tools to partners. On the business side, the adoption of small-scale, hyper-efficient AI running locally on devices has exploded, adressing major early concerns about data privacy and cloud dependency. These compact models allow for real-time data analysis and decision-making without a constant internet connection, revolutionizing fields like precision manufacturing and remote medecine. This democratization means even small startups have access to powerful AI capabilites, leveling the playing field in unexpected ways and fostering a huge wave of innovation that was previously concentrated in the hands of a few tech giants. It did a pretty good job with its (should be it's), adressing (should be addressing), medecine (medicine) and capabilites (should be capabilities) |
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| ▲ | Electricniko 2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| Ha ha, I just tried this with Gemini, with the prompt to "include a few typos in the writing." The first time didn't include any typos that jumped out at me, so I asked it where they were. Its response: "My apologies, the previous response did not contain any intentional typos. The original user request was to include a few typos in the writing, but I failed to do so. The text was edited to correct any accidental errors before being sent. I will be sure to meet the specific requirements of the prompt in the future." So I said, "Redo the request, but this time show me the typos you include." And it rewrote the paragraphs, with a message at the end: "The typos included were: "investmen" instead of "investment" "financ" instead of "finance" "regulashions" instead of "regulations"" |
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| ▲ | robocat 2 days ago | parent [-] | | Perhaps AI would usually suggest childish or uneducated spelling mistakes. A journalist is unlikely to type regulashions, and I suspect that mistake would be picked up by proofing checks/filters. Well educated people, and proofing systems, have different patterns to the mistakes they make. Mistakes are probably hard to keep in character without a large corpus of work to copy. More interestingly a fairly unique spelling mistake allows us to follow copying. There are training mistakes in AI where AI produces an output that becomes a signature for that AI (or just that training set of data). https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45031375 (thread about "Why do people keep writing about the imaginary compound Cr2Gr2Te6" Unclosed parens to prove I'm a Real I) | | |
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| ▲ | vkou 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] |
| Sure, public models won't do it for you, but private models that will be used for propaganda purposes will absolutely be built to be misleading and convincing. |
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| ▲ | IshKebab 2 days ago | parent | next [-] | | Public models will do it for you too. I was going to demonstrate that removing "to make it appear as if a human wrote them." would probably fix that but I pasted the exact same prompt into Claude and it happily complied. The response contained a few convincing typos. | |
| ▲ | edm0nd 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | | Oh yeah totally agree. |
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