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no_multitudes an hour ago

Please write your blog post yourself if you expect people to read it. The LLM output is very grating.

Hnrobert42 9 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

Huh. I didn't assume it was LLM-generated. I liked the article. I appreciated that author cared about the 14K phish recipients as if they were proper users.

I will say, I've grown bored of folks complaining about AI generated content. But, to each their own. Good luck storming the castle.

pressbuttons an hour ago | parent | prev [-]

Why do you think this is LLM-generated? Reads perfectly fine to me.

no_multitudes 43 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

The sentence construction, choice of vocabulary, and continually breathless tone are all clear indicators this was written by an llm and barely edited.

I threw part of it into pangram to get a second opinion:

https://www.pangram.com/history/8d6a7de3-86ac-4ce0-86c5-4f93...

jedberg 16 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

Have you tried putting known human writing into pangram? I have. I've gotten 100% AI with multiple samples of my own human writing. It has also given me 50% on things I know were 100% AI written (from my prompts).

Pangram and everything like it is useless. The results are random on known samples.

MostlyStable 6 minutes ago | parent | next [-]

Pangram specifically (as opposed to most other detectors) publish internal audits, and seem to welcome external audits [0]. I'm not saying that you are necessarily wrong, just that in my opinion they have earned a higher bar of criticism than random one off anecdote.

[0] https://xcancel.com/JohnHolbein1/status/2059648132250570975#...

jedberg 3 minutes ago | parent [-]

That's a fair criticism, I certainly didn't run a full benchmark. Just a few of my own pieces of writing. I also did it a few months ago, maybe it's gotten better since.

no_multitudes 10 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

That's interesting! I have tried to get false positives from pangram and failed, so I trusted it a bit more than any of the others, although I generally just rely on my own intuition. I am curious what your false positive samples looked like, if you're willing to share.

(I'm less interested in false negatives; I have successfully produced those myself.)

jedberg 2 minutes ago | parent [-]

I'll try to pull them up for you, I'd have to go back and find them on my computer.

JRandomHacker42 30 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

> There was no exploit. No vulnerability disclosure. No CVE for me to write.

was a dead giveaway in my mind when I read it.

titularcomment 6 minutes ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Dots and periods. Everywhere. So many. There is no paragraph — its sentences all the way down.

That made me think if the project is entirely vibecoded as well.

Even for a project manager without network access, hosting flawed software on your LAN can only get you so far.

poly2it 37 minutes ago | parent | prev [-]

> What stuck with me wasn’t the scale, although 14,000 people getting a phishing email from a domain I own is bad. It was how mundane it was.

> There was no exploit. No vulnerability disclosure. No CVE for me to write. The attacker filled out my signup form 942 times, made 942 workspaces, sent 942 batches of about a hundred invitations each, and stopped. They used my tool exactly as designed. The design was just bad enough that the tool was good for phishing.

Barbing 2 minutes ago | parent [-]

The comments continue until the patterns are internalized https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48316049