| >So? You think there aren't plenty of human lawyers who offer questionable/flawed legal advice? I'm not saying it's not worthy of criticism for specific use-cases or output quality, but that's not really what this thread is about. They can be disbarred. Your AI can't. >When building an email service we can expect godlike perfection. That's certainly not a standard I've been advocating for. > What's interesting is the AI approaching behavior akin to living beings, whether that's animal, toddler, mentally disabled, or adult level intelligence/behavior. You are just anthropomorphizing. > Remember humans also confabulate: confidently fabricate memories and explanations post-hoc. What does that have to do with ChatGPT at all? It's a post-hoc rationalization of chatGPT's own lack of explanation. Just because it's not clear how humans think, doesn't mean that the same thing is happening in ChatGPT just because we aren't clear on that either. >Also remember that some great minds have entertained the "Language of Thought hypothesis", long before computers, which takes language as the building blocks of thought, so is it really that surprising that people are drawing parallels between a machine that uses language as it's building blocks of behavior and human behavior? Yeah, because ChatGPT doesn't exhibit human behaviors, at all. |
Why not? That seems to be lacking imagination. There's all sorts of regulation that can be brought to bear.
> Yeah, because ChatGPT doesn't exhibit human behaviors, at all.
You can think so, but others disagree. Here is where the thread started.
> The more I work with LLMs, the more I think of them as plagiarization engines. > We're all kind of plagiariztion engines.
If you don't see any similarities others see, then further discussion is fruitless.
> ChatGPT doesn't exhibit human behaviors, at all.
Chat is a behavior humans do. It chats, and pretty damn well. Clearly you mean something else then what you are explicitly saying.