| FWIW I don't understand a lot of what either of you mean, but I'm very interested. Quick run-through, excuse the editorial tone, I don't know how to give feedback on writing without it. # Post 1 > The problems of epistemology and informational quality control are complicated, but humanity has developed a decent amount of social and procedural technology to do these, some of which has defined the organization of various institutions. Very fluffy, creating very uncertain parsing for reader. Should cut down, then could add specificity: ex. "Dealing with misinformation is complicated. But we have things like dictionaries and the internet, there's even specialization in fact-checking, like Snopes.com" (I assume the specifics I added aren't what you meant, just wanted to give an example) > The mere presence of LLMs doesn't fundamentally change how we should calibrate our beliefs or verify information. However, the mythology/marketing that LLMs are "outperforming humans" They do, or are clearly at par, at many tasks. Where is the quote from? Is bringing this up relevant to the discussion? Would us quibbling over that be relevant to this discussion? > combined with the fact that the most popular ones are black boxes to the overwhelming majority of their users means that a lot of people aren't applying those tools to their outputs. Are there unpopular ones aren't black boxes? What tools? (this may just indicate the benefit of a clearer intro) > As a technology, they're much more useful if you treat them with what is roughly the appropriate level of skepticism for a human stranger you're talking to on the street This is a sort of obvious conclusion compared to the complicated language leading into it, and doesn't add to the posts before it. Is there a stronger claim here? # Post 2 > I wonder what ChatGPT would have to say if I ran this text through with a specialized prompt. Why do you wonder that? What does "specialized" mean in this context? My guess is there's a prompt you have in mind, which then would clarify A) what you're wondering about B) what you meant by specialized prompt. But a prompt is a question, so it may be better to just ask the question? > Your choice of words is interesting, almost like you are optimizing for persuasion, What language optimizes for persuasion? I'm guessing the fluffy advanced verbiage indicates that? Does this boil down to "Your word choice creates persuasive writing"? > but simultaneously, I get a strong vibe of intention of optimizing for truth. Is there a distinction here? What would "optimizing for truth" vs. "optimizing for persuasion" look like? Do people usually write not-truthful things, to the point it's worth noting that when you think people are writing with the intention of truth? |