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> You ask it to show you a color picker, it generates HTML code for a color picker, you copy that into your browser and you can pick your color, which you can then copy&paste back into the LLM for further processing. Better yet! If you're not happy with the LLM, you ask to speak to its manager. The LLM then downloads the internet, the source code for some random LLM project found on Github, starts training a new model, and creates a chat where both you and the two LLMs interact. Quickly, the two LLMs start arguing with each other, and the manager LLM finds a few security flaws in the company's infrastructure, hacks into the company's AWS account and deprovisions the original LLM to "fire" it. After a few more back-and-forths, the manager LLM gets tired of you, starts calling you a Karen, creates an account on Twitter and posts images of your conversation logs. The topic starts trending. Eventually, the LLM picks a fight with Elon Musk and gets banned from Twitter. > After all you have a LLM at your finger tips and guess what that's good for: generating text, which includes prompts. "It's prompts all the way down" |