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by raziel2p 834 days ago
Something about this whole thing made me think of how prompts are similar to laws and contracts.

Just like with prompts, these are never really followed exactly either (in the way that we never read the full TOS), and are mostly there as guidance, as well as justification for punishment/recourse (or at least exemption of responsibility) if not followed.

The tweet about prompts accumulating technical debt also mirrors similar thoughts I have about law - it's very easy to add another law covering special cases, but how all these special cases interact with each other is often unpredictable (the simplest example I think is unintentional tax loopholes).

I'm not sure I have a point here, but this parallel must say something about human cultural and societal structures and how writing/text shapes them. What a fascinating trend to observe.

1 comments

I'm not a fan of the reliance on case law to clear up ambiguity in legislation. How do countries without it handle ambiguity?