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by fn-mote
495 days ago
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> And it takes me right to someone's specific website. Which you then have to assess for believability, just like ChatGPT. And read the comments and incorporate their reactions, or know enough to not need them (but then the search isn’t contributing much, is it?). > But with ChatGPT there is some significant probability of hallucination As opposed to ending up on a bogus SEO-“created” web site. I guess fake recipes are more obvious, but I see a lot of BS on the low end of online recipes too. |
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I don’t understand how there is any comparison. The only way I can assess the reliability of an LLM is by doing hundreds of trials, analyzing each one for correctness— a gargantuan task. And it’s not like OpenAI has ever done such testing! And even if I did that work (which I HAVE done in other contexts while researching LLM reliability) I cannot assume that it will remain reliable when the model is updated.
Meanwhile there are well known social forces that act on humans to encourage them to not put poison into their recipes. No such force acts on ChatGPT until a kid gets poisoned or some outrageous recipe goes viral.
Sometimes I wonder if certain other people are using some different Internet than I use.