| I didn't read the posted article (I don't read this author anymore because I think it's basically anti-AI ideological propaganda). But from the article I linked back in March 2024: "Generative AI models are expensive and compute-intensive without providing obvious, tangible mass-market use cases. Murati and Altman's futures depend heavily on keeping the world believing that development and improvement of their models' capabilities will continue a rapacious pace of progress that has unquestionably slowed, with OpenAI admitting that GPT-4 may be worse on some tasks. As I've written before, hallucinations are a feature not a bug. These models do not "know" anything. They are mathematical behemoths generating a best guess based on training data and labeling, and thus do not "know" what you are asking it to do. You simply cannot fix them. Hallucinations are not going away." Since then: - hallucinations are dramatically less of a problem - several mass market use cases have emerged, most notably coding - rate of progress has increased |
> - hallucinations are dramatically less of a problem
Sure, but it remains a big enough problem that human intervention and review is still necessary for any serious work across all use cases and industries.
> - several mass market use cases have emerged, most notably coding
Coding seems to be the only one, but there are still a lot of open questions about how the market can sustain the costs, and that's without considering the market dynamics that could emerge once costs are lowered enough that open source models start to become an attractive option.
> - rate of progress has increased
Debatable.