| ▲ | Terretta 2 hours ago | |
> If you're looking for something beyond corporate safespeak or stylistic pastiche, they drain the blood out of everything. Strong agree, which is why I disagree with this OP point: “Stage 2: Lexical flattening. Domain-specific jargon and high-precision technical terms are sacrificed for "accessibility." The model performs a statistical substitution, replacing a 1-of-10,000 token with a 1-of-100 synonym, effectively diluting the semantic density and specific gravity of the argument.” I see enough jargon in everyday business email that in the office zero-shot LLM unspoolings can feel refreshing. I have "avoid jargon and buzzwords" as one of very tiny tuners in my LLM prefs. I've found LLMs can shed corporate safespeak, or even add a touch of sparkle back to a corporate memo. Otherwise very bright writers have been "polished" to remove all interestingness by pre-LLM corporate homogenization. Give them a prompt to yell at them for using 1-in-10 words instead of 1-in-10,000 "perplexity" and they can tune themselves back to conveying more with the same word count. Results… scintillate. | ||