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I didn't say anything about cheating. In fact, if it did cheat, that would make for a much stronger argument in your favor. If scoring highly on an exam implies intelligence then certainly I'm not intelligent and the Super Nintendo from the 90s is more sentient than myself, given I'm terrible at chess. I personally don't agree with that definition, nor does any dictionary I'm familiar with, nor do any software engineers with whom I'm familiar, nor any LLM specialists, including the forefront developers at OpenAI, xAI, Google, etc. as far as I'm aware. But for some reason (it's a very obvious reason $$$), marketers, against the engineers' protest, appear to be claiming otherwise. This is what you're up against and what you'll find the courts, and lawyers, will go by when this comparison comes to a head. In my opinion, I can't wait for this to happen. Thrilled to know if I shouldn't wait for that. If you're directly involved with some credible research to the contrary, I would love to hear more. But IMO, in this case at least, has nothing to do with intelligence. It's performing a search against its own training data, and piecing together a response in line with that data, while including the context of the search term (aka the question). This is run through a series of linear regressions, and a response is produced. There is nothing really groundbreaking here, as best I can tell. |
It is unsupportable to claim that ML researchers at leading labs share your opinion. Since roughly 2022, they understand that they are working with systems capable of reasoning: https://arxiv.org/abs/2205.11916