| ▲ | zemo 9 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> I never want to have a conversation with a website that is geared towards advertising me products. yeah man good thing LLMs are structurally incapable of being incentivized to sell you a product or render referral links, this is surely future-proof | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | NietzscheanNull 9 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Or subtly misrepresent politically inconvenient facts, or gently steer you into opinions based on a synthesis of broker data and demographic info, or quietly flag you in some database column due to exhibiting dissident-adjacent ideas or behaviors, or... Yeah, they probably aren't doing (most of) these now, but it doesn't take much mental energy to extrapolate once you factor nearly every other tech company's ethical trajectory and the current geopolitical environment. Substituting classic search entirely with LLMs is not a savvy move. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| ▲ | pclowes 9 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
My thought here is that there are many. They have proven to be commodities in most use cases. As soon as one gets annoying, expensive, advertiser heavy etc. you just rip it out and replace it with the other one. AFAICT there is zero lock-in or moat. I often am able to switch models in one click or command. This is why all the LLM providers are desperate for a product layer/comprehensive tool set. Sure maybe they all end up that way, but there’s plenty of reasons corporate customers will want private LLM usage that is not skewed towards advertising. I am happy to pay for that. Also, open source models are a bulwark against another search style ad Monopoly. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||