| ▲ | xigoi 2 hours ago | |||||||
Would you trust the tool that recommended putting glue on pizza to give you a good recipe? | ||||||||
| ▲ | coryrc an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||
I have/make rice starch glue. Can you put it on food? How are you supposed to know whether it's food safe? Okay, so you don't trust LLM, so you go to a website instead. And... LLM-generated pages are SEO'd to get the top links. So you can't trust any website now (shoot, so much nonsense even before LLM, just more obvious to some of us). So basically everything on a computer is untrustworthy, directly from an LLM or not, unless you got yourself a copy of Encarta '97. So you pick up a book at the local library. Librarians picked some books to order in subject matters they aren't expert in. How do you know those are accurate and safe? If the book says to use rice starch glue, how do you know the author didn't just copy that from an LLM? Or make it up? Trust is fading entirely. | ||||||||
| ▲ | lpapez an hour ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||
If the user puts glue on their pizza because a computer said so, that's a human problem. The computer generated recipes can be useful as inspiration, but of course common sense is required. | ||||||||
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