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by oefrha
659 days ago
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Or they could still work on it, but don’t use it on customers until it’s good enough. > Zhou shared a striking example of how AI-generated content could lead to real-world consequences. “Some of the initial stock images of various ingredients looked like a hot dog, but it wasn’t quite a hot dog—it looked like, kind of like an alien hot dog,” he said. Such errors, he argued, could erode consumer trust or, in more extreme cases, pose actual harm. “If the recipe potentially was a hallucinated recipe, you don’t want to have someone make something that may actually harm them.” There’s absolutely no reason Instacart has to show customers AI-hallucinated recipes from stock images. They choose to do it, then beat the drum about AI security as if they actually give a shit. It’s like Boeing self-certification. |
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