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by grumbel
1147 days ago
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You don't need to predict if it what written by LLM, if it's a human or machine makes no difference to the validity of a text. You just need to be able to extract the actual information out of it and cross check it against other sources. The summary that an LLM can provide is not just of one text, but of all the texts about the topic it has access to. Thus you never need to access the actual texts itself, just whatever the LLM condenses out of them. |
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How do you determine the trustworthiness of those other sources when an ever increasing portion are also LLM generated?
All the "you just need to" responses are predicted on being able to police the LLM output based upon your own expertise (e.g., much talk about code generation being like working with junior devs, and so being able to replace all your juniors and just have super productive seniors).
Question: how does one become an expert? Yep, it's right there: experts are made through experience.
So if LLMs replace all the low experience roles, how exactly do new experts emerge?