|
|
|
|
|
by anoncareer0212
473 days ago
|
|
"Early testing doesn't show that it hallucinates less, but we expect that putting ["we expect it will hallucinate less"] nearby will lead you to draw a connection there yourself"." The link, the link we are discussing shows testing, with numbers. They say "early testing doesn't show that it hallucinates less", to provide a basis for a claim of bad faith. You are claiming that mentioning this is out of bounds if it contains the word lying. I looked up the definition. It says "used with reference to a situation involving deception or founded on a mistaken impression." What am I missing here? Let's pretend lying means You Are An Evil Person And This Is Personal!!! How do I describe the fact what they claim is false? Am I supposed to be sarcastic and pretend They are in on it and edited their post to discredit him after the fact? |
|
That comment is making fun of their wording. Maybe extracting too much meaning from their wordplay? Maybe.
Afterwards, evidence is presented that they did not have to do this, which makes that point not so important, and even wrong.
The commenter was not lying, and they were correct about how masterfully deceiving that sequence of sentences are. They arrived at a wrong conclusion though.
Kindly point that out. Say, "hey, the numbers tell a different story, perhaps they didn't mean/need to make a wordplay there".