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by autokad
1169 days ago
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chatgpt doesnt just feed us back answers we already taught it. It learned relationships and semantics so it can apply that knowledge to do something novel. For instance, I took the basic of a dream and told it to turn it into a short story. The short story wasn't bad. I said make it more exciting, it updated the story such that one of the cars exploded. I guess chatgpt learned excitement from michael bay. |
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> chatgpt doesnt just feed us back answers we already taught it
True, there is some structure to the answers we already taught it that it statistically mimics as well.
> It learned relationships and semantics so it can apply that knowledge to do something novel
Can you provide an example of this novelty? I think we underestimate the depth and variety of things that humans have written about and put on the internet, and so while anything you ask ChatGPT to do might be outside of your own experience, it's highly likely that it's already been thought before and uploaded to the internet, and that ChatGPT is just parrotting back something to you that is very similar to what it has already seen.
This effect of ChatGPT having so much more experience/training data than any single human being such that it can convince any single human that it is original is an interesting one.
This is why I think, for example, that image generation will result in (a period of) "artistic inbreeding." Because there is so much that other humans have done that is outside of any individual's experience, we will accept e.g. Midjourney's output as something moving and original, when in reality it's just a slight variation on something that someone else has done before that we haven't seen.
(Again apologies for any rudeness, I respect your opinion and experiences and am enjoying the conversation.)