| ▲ | anal_reactor 8 hours ago | |||||||
You're making the classic mistake of looking for a trustworthy information source and then trusting it, instead of focusing on whether the information itself is trustworthy regardless of source. It's literally the same as my grandma saying "they said so on TV, therefore it must be true" while completely dismissing anything I've read on the internet because reasons. If you develop the skill of judging information by its merit rather than source, you won't mind AI-generated content as long as it's helpful. I talk to LLMs a lot. It's fucking great. Do I take everything they say at face value? No. But neither do I take at face value things that biological intelligence outputs. | ||||||||
| ▲ | xboxnolifes 6 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
Information itself cannot be trustworthy. It can be right, it can be wrong, or it can be somewhere in between. Only a source can have trustworthiness, as it's a mixed measure of reputation and provable accuracy. You filter out known untrustworthy sources to not waste your time verifying false information 100x more than you need to. I know The Onion is a satire publication. I do not need to verify its claims. It's an intentionally untrustworthy source. I know that LLMs can hallucinate information, so I verify with a more trustworthy source. I cross-reference things random people say on the internet, because random people on the internet are not, individually, trustworthy sources of information. If a rocket engineer explains to me why Rocket A isn't flight ready, I'm more inclined to believe them than if a random commenter on the internet explains it to me. Because the one source is more trustworthy than another, and if I wanted to verify the claim myself I'd have to spend a lot of time studying rocket science. | ||||||||
| ▲ | predkambrij 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
Well, if not disclosed you could assume that somebody did due diligence for you, and could include sources. I don't even trust LLM even if all the information is included in the context window if I need reliable information. Trying to make money on slop is really bad manners. It's a scam, you can't call it otherwise. Btw, I like AI, it did a ton of value for me. We just need to find a way to live with it, without getting doomed in misinformation. | ||||||||
| ▲ | eh_why_not 8 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
No it's not the same as your grandma. The point is that it's now more expensive to find the correct information to learn from. You don't know it's an LLM ahead of time, and you may spend hours until you figure out something is off. Hence why reputable sources will become more valuable. > If you develop the skill of judging information by its merit rather than source.. Did you read example #1? I'm not talking about some piece of code from an LLM that you can verify or some political opinion that you can take with a grain of salt, but information that you can only gain and/or judge through expertise: If you're not a physicist yourself, you can't judge "information by its merit" on specific physics topics, because you don't have a solid baseline. Similarly, in growing plants, each plant has its own peculiarities, and only people experienced in growing it can tell you anything useful - it's knowledge accumulated by trial and error. Not knowledge that your "great discerning mind" can assess on its own. Even a botanist can't tell you the ideal growing conditions of a plant that they've never studied before. | ||||||||
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| ▲ | rcxdude 6 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |||||||
You do ultimately need to trust some sources to some degree. You can try to cross-correlate multiple sources (and this is in general a good habit!), but that depends on some level of trustworthiness in the sources you are looking at, you're not at all immune to misinformation by doing this (especially if multiple sources are, undisclosed, being generated from the same LLM. You can also get citenogenesis even pre-LLMs). And of course for some things it's possible to try to verify directly yourself, but this is infeasible to do for everything you depend on. | ||||||||
| ▲ | SpicyLemonZest 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
There’s a lot of things where this just doesn’t work. I was wrong about a lot of business strategy things when I was younger, to the point where I rejected what I now see were correct arguments against my view of things. How could I have gotten out of that trap without the ability to find trustworthy sources? | ||||||||