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by tel
1162 days ago
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Of course. And the answer that follows will be the most likely response to that question. Probably, over the entire dataset, that implies it will be a factual or correct answer. But it's pretty trivial to demonstrate GPT just giving the most popular answer, or even the most common answer to the class of questions that sound similar to the one asked (try asking it "what weighs more, 2 pounds of feathers or 1 pound of stones?") Or more subtly, it may detect hints of bias, context, setting, influence, culture, or even coercion in how the question is asked. And respond as is most likely given those things. We often ask it questions much like a teacher would ask a child. What if we asked it the way a student asked a teacher? Or a researcher? Or a prophet? I definitely think a ton about how powerful "given this prefix, predict what follows" might be. |
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