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lemagedurage 17 hours ago

The 80% accuracy from the article would be one reason to believe there's significant correlation, no?

sigmoid10 16 hours ago | parent [-]

I could probably find quite a lot of people who will tell you astrology is 80+% correct for them. Would you believe them or wait for an independent analysis? There are other AI "detector" systems out there that claim 99% accuracy. But independent research always found that they are actually garbage once used on real data. It's all in how you pick your tests. It's also funny to see how people on places like HN will easily dismiss stuff astrology, but fall for the exact same patterns when used in tech-y applications.

lemagedurage 15 hours ago | parent [-]

Well I don't think the position of planets when you're born has a large correlation to how your life will go.

On the other hand, how an AI writes will have a big correlation to whether the written text would likely be written by an AI.

The latter is more of a direct relationship.

Maybe A and B are not correlated, and Y and Z are? What pattern are people falling for here?

strgcmc 9 hours ago | parent [-]

It's not really about the planets. It's about what other people believe about the planets.

You could work for a boss that's a Leo, and he/she believes only Leos deserve to get promoted, or that Leos and Scorpios should never be assigned together on a shared project. Your life and career trajectory under this boss could be totally different, depending on whether you were born a Leo or not.

Certainly "not all bosses" applies, but it's not really that farfetched or uncommon either. The point is that a correlation does exist, but it's a social one and not a physical or astronomical one (and it's also often a self-reinforcing/self-fulfilling one: Leos who read what astrology says Leos should do, may end up choosing to behave more like that).

So in the LLM example, it may not really matter much what physical markers of provenance or physical correlations there are, as social beliefs or perceptions about suspected provenance may be the strongest correlation anyways (in terms of impact and outcomes).