Steven Rosenbaum explains how inaccurate quotes got into his book <em>The Future of Truth</em>.
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Yes. And like any new drug, there’s a certain fraction of a population that’s especially susceptible, and on whom the effects will be catastrophic. I grew up in Alaska. Alaska Natives were never exposed to alcohol in pre-modern times, you can’t make weak beer on the tundra or an ice shore, and as a result they have vastly less tolerance for booze than people of European descent. Whiskey and other high-alcohol drinks have been, yeah, catastrophic for a lot of them. I do think something like that is what we’re seeing with LLMs for and on ourselves now. I agree with Sarty’s comment earlier, the more I see the less I want to experiment on myself. I fear where it could go.I actually wonder if online gambling and now LLMs are, like video games for my generation, exposing people who have addictive personalities but who have avoided substance abuse for one reason or another...
Impressive for an author to unwittingly get caught by the technology he's writing about. From this we can deduce that:
Sounds like a great, informative book /s
- the author really doesn't understand AI
- he somehow did not take "AI delusions" seriously while writing about it
- he did not actually read the source material that he quotes
- there wasn't fact-checking as part of the writing or editing processes (despite his claims)
It's hard to keep holding this position in light of the current state of the models. Yes, limited to what they have been trained on, but they have been trained on intelligently producing chains of thought that, sometimes, produces things humans just haven't been able to do. See the below article for one of the most astonishing results, literally just published yesterday.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/...-erdos-problem-and-mathematicians-are-amazed/
Impressive for an author to unwittingly get caught by the technology he's writing about. From this we can deduce that:
Sounds like a great, informative book /s
- the author really doesn't understand AI
- he somehow did not take "AI delusions" seriously while writing about it
- he did not actually read the source material that he quotes
- there wasn't fact-checking as part of the writing or editing processes (despite his claims)
My days of not taking him seriously have certainly reached a middle.Was curious, so looked at what other works he's authored:
https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B0F7J3KB8C
2 books on how to curate content, and a third book called Curation Nation, how to win in a world where consumers are creators.
And then this book.
I do like his hat.
RAGs fail. They’re still probabilistic at their root.It seems like there’s a desire for a sort of quote-and-source tracking AI tool, to the extent that authors are instead misusing these generative tools for this task. They really aren’t well suited to it: when you ask an LLM to make sure to generate a real quote, it dutifully generates random text that looks like a real quote!
Is it really not possible to come up with some sort of RAG based system that actually looks through your papers and provides links instead of text? That doesn’t seem very difficult…
I really don't find any of this "delicious." It's a sickness being pushed on all of us irresponsibly at every level.The irony in this story has layers, and it is delicious.
I watched a recent video discussing Richard Dawkins recent gullible fall into thinking an LLM was sentient, and the quotes from his article and context shows he really just fell for the sychophancy of the LLM, while also presenting an intellectually dishonest argument.Of course her finds it delightful, it's designed to be sycophantic to a fault, this kind of people find that delightful.
It reminds me of an old meme about Little Ceasar's Pizza:I can't fathom running across so many examples of these tools fucking things up and still being like "yeah but it's faaast." It's just.... man, I don't even know. Like the "extract this quote verbatim" and the tool STILL doesn't do it, that really should be some kind of sign.
LLM Companies: It's fast and cheap.
Us: Is it good?
LLM Companies: It's FAST. And it's CHEAP.
Unfortunately archive.is is playing its RT-redirection game again.Link to Dawkin's article if you want the raw, unfiltered, absurdity:
https://archive.is/6RdK9
(I'd link to archive.org , but it didn't archive the whole article, just the paywall).
It didn't produce new knowledge and relied on known mathematical tools.I'm not saying it is a person or that you should consider it is intelligent in any sort of human sense, I'm saying you can't simply say "It's limited to what it is trained on", and wave it aside as if it can't be useful or produce any new knowledge. This is clearly false, the benefits of these general purpose system for producing knowledge has already been proven by this example, and it will likely only get faster from here. I.e., not intelligent, but "creative" in the sense that it can create new things that humans have not, including knowledge and mathematical proofs.
I want to be a promptist when I grow up! <sigh>If you sell it, list the model as author and yourself as co-author (or promptist).