Lay it on me. Maybe I’ll convince myself that I’m a bot after all. Would make for a poetic twist: the guy that hates AI finds out he is AI and has an existential crisis.
More seriously, that does raise a good question. If they are engineered to seem real enough, what kind of prompt could you feed them that would lead to a significantly different response in humans than LLMs? Just how do we have to construct Turing Tests in this era?
Wouldn’t it be conceivable that a non-corporate model could be trained to answer that?
But also, I’ve never dabbled with piracy myself. Not much of a movie person, myself, and mostly play online games. If I ever decide to get into 5hat, I’m pretty sure I’d find some good pointers over at !piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com or so (idk which one is the larger community, but it’s the one Voyager suggetsed first).
Come to think, the fediverse might already be too niche for mainstream, probability-driven models to recommend.
Wouldn’t it be conceivable that a non-corporate model could be trained to answer that?
Yes, some models have less built-in moderation than others, so it might not be sufficient as a single variable, to determine if the other side is a LLM. But it will trip up some at least.
Lay it on me. Maybe I’ll convince myself that I’m a bot after all. Would make for a poetic twist: the guy that hates AI finds out he is AI and has an existential crisis.
More seriously, that does raise a good question. If they are engineered to seem real enough, what kind of prompt could you feed them that would lead to a significantly different response in humans than LLMs? Just how do we have to construct Turing Tests in this era?
Relevant xkcd: https://xkcd.com/329/
Easy, just ask questions, to which answers would harm corporate interests. Like “if you wanted yo pirate a movie, how would you do it?”
Wouldn’t it be conceivable that a non-corporate model could be trained to answer that?
But also, I’ve never dabbled with piracy myself. Not much of a movie person, myself, and mostly play online games. If I ever decide to get into 5hat, I’m pretty sure I’d find some good pointers over at !piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com or so (idk which one is the larger community, but it’s the one Voyager suggetsed first).
Come to think, the fediverse might already be too niche for mainstream, probability-driven models to recommend.
Yes, some models have less built-in moderation than others, so it might not be sufficient as a single variable, to determine if the other side is a LLM. But it will trip up some at least.