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by shagie
1216 days ago
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The blog post claims that a human generated video with incorrect information was the source of this. So, why are we blaming GPT for this incorrect information? What's more, the blog post is claiming that GPT was trained on video material (which it wasn't) which is also incorrect information and is apparently convincing enough to cause people to get up in arms about the product of yet another company. The combination of issues of (a) people are using a language model as a knowledge base, (b) incorrect information exists out there on the net, and (c) people are assuming that the knowledge base is correct and not reading the documentation before singing up. Alternatively, would you say that humans posting information that is incorrect and falsely represents the capabilities of another company's product should be similarly covered in laws? |
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I didn't blame ChatGPT for anything. I just said that it's only function is to generate lies.
> Alternatively, would you say that humans posting information that is incorrect and falsely represents the capabilities of another company's product should be similarly covered in laws?
Machines shouldn't have the same rights to speech as humans. A single company controlling ChatGPT can flood society with billions of convincing lies per hour. There's no point in any automation if it's not more efficient than a human is, and ChatGPT is far more efficient than humans at putting this stuff out.
The same straw man is always used with ChatGPT: a human can lie, so why not let this machine lie?
You might as well say that a human can punch someone to death, so why should we outlaw people owning rocket launchers?
The scale and purpose matters.