| ▲ | thephyber 3 hours ago | |||||||
I think it absolutely is coming to an end in lots of ways. Movie/show reviews, product reviews, app/browser extension reviews, programming libraries, etc all get gamed. An entire industry of booting reviews has sprung up from PR companies brigading positive reviews for their clients. The better AI gets at slop and controlling bots to create slop which is indistinguishable from human content, the less people will trust content on those platforms. Your trust relationship with your artist almost certainly was based on something other than just contact info. Usually you review a portfolio, a professional profile, and you start with a small project to limit your downside risk. This tentative relationship and phased stages where trust is increased is how human trust relationships have always worked. | ||||||||
| ▲ | embedding-shape 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> Movie/show reviews, product reviews, app/browser extension reviews, programming libraries, etc all get gamed. An entire industry of booting reviews has sprung up from PR companies brigading positive reviews for their clients. But for a long time, unrelated to AI. When Amazon was first available here in Spain (don't remember exactly what year, but before LLMs for sure), the amount of fraudulent reviews filling the platform was already noticeable at that point. That industry you're talking about might have gotten new wings with LLMs, but it wasn't spawned by LLMs, it existed long time before that. > the less people will trust content on those platforms. Maybe I'm jarred from using the internet from a young age, but both me and my peers basically has a built-in mistrust against random stuff we see on the internet, at least compared to our parents and our younger peers. "Don't believe everything you see on the internet" been a mantra almost for as long as the internet has existed, maybe people forgot and needed an reminder, but it was never not true. | ||||||||
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