• swlabr@awful.systems
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    4 months ago

    ATTN: If you’re coming into this thread to say, “The output of AI is bad because your prompts suck,” I’m just proud that you managed to figure out how to use the internet at all. Good job, you!

    • froztbyte@awful.systems
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      4 months ago

      remember remember, eternal september

      (not that I much agree with the classist overtones of the original, but fuck me does it come to mind often)

  • Lvxferre@mander.xyz
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    4 months ago

    You could use them to know what the text is about, and if it’s worth your reading time. In this situation, it’s fine if the AI makes shit up, as you aren’t reading its output for the information itself anyway; and the distinction between summary and shortened version becomes moot.

    However, here’s the catch. If the text is long enough to warrant the question “should I spend my time reading this?”, it should contain an introduction for that very purpose. In other words if the text is well-written you don’t need this sort of “Gemini/ChatGPT, tell me what this text is about” on first place.

    EDIT: I’m not addressing documents in this. My bad, I know. [In my defence I’m reading shit in a screen the size of an ant.]

    • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      ChatGPT gives you a bad summary full of hallucinations and, as a result, you choose not to read the text based on that summary.

      • Lvxferre@mander.xyz
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        4 months ago

        (For clarity I’ll re-emphasise that my top comment is the result of misreading the word “documents” out, so I’m speaking on general grounds about AI “summaries”, not just about AI “summaries” of documents.)

        The key here is that the LLM is likely to hallucinate the claims of the text being shortened, but not the topic. So provided that you care about the later but not the former, in order to decide if you’re going to read the whole thing, it’s good enough.

        And that is useful in a few situations. For example, if you have a metaphorical pile of a hundred or so scientific papers, and you only need the ones about a specific topic (like “Indo-European urheimat” or “Argiope spiders” or “banana bonds”).

        That backtracks to the OP. The issue with using AI summaries for documents is that you typically know the topic at hand, and you want the content instead. That’s bad because then the hallucinations won’t be “harmless”.

        • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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          4 months ago

          But the claims of the text are often why you read it in the first place! If you have a hundred scientific papers you’re going to read the ones that make claims either supporting or contradicting your research.

          You might as well just skim the titles and guess.

          • Lvxferre@mander.xyz
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            4 months ago

            But the claims of the text are often why you read it in the first place!

            By “not caring about the former” [claims], I mean in the LLM output, because you know that the LLM will fuck them up. But it’ll still somewhat accurately represent the topic of the text, and you can use this to your advantage.

            You might as well just skim the titles and guess.

            Nirvana fallacy.

            • self@awful.systems
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              4 months ago

              not reading the fucking sidebar and thinking this is high school debate club fallacy

              • Lvxferre@mander.xyz
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                4 months ago

                not reading the fucking sidebar

                Yeah, I get that this is a place to vent. And I get why to vent about this. LLMs and other A"I" systems (with quotation marks because this shite is not intelligent!) are being shoved down every bloody where, regardless of actual usefulness, safety, or user desire. Telling you to put glue on your pizza, to eat poisonous mushrooms, that “cherish” has five letters, that Latin had no [w], that the Chinese are inferior to Westerners.

                While a crowd of irrationals tell you “it is intelligent, you can’t prove otherwise! CHRUST IT YOU DIRTY SCEPTIC/INFIDEL/LUDDITE REEEE! LALALA I’M PRETENDING TO NOT SEE THE HALLUCINATION LALALA”.

                I also get the privacy nightmare that this shit is. And the whole deal behind “we’re using your content as training data, and then selling the result back to you”. Or that it’s eating electricity like there’s no tomorrow, in a planet where global warming is a present issue.

                I get it. I get it all. That’s why I’m here. And if you (or anyone else) think that I’m here for any other reason, by all means, check my profile - you’ll find plenty pieces of criticism against those stupid corporate AI takes from vulture capital. (And plenty instances of me calling HN “Redditors LARPing as Hax0rz”. )

                However. Pretending that there’s no use case ever for LLMs is the wrong way to go.

                and thinking this is high school debate club fallacy

                If calling it “nirvana fallacy” rubs you the wrong way, here’s an alternative: “this argument is fucking stupid, in a very specific way: it pretends that either something is perfect or it’s useless, with no middle ground.”

                The other user however does not deserve the unnecessary abrasiveness so I’ll keep simply calling it “nirvana fallacy”.

                • self@awful.systems
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                  4 months ago

                  holy shit, imagine getting a second chance to not be a fucking debatelord and doubling down this hard

                  off you fuck

            • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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              4 months ago

              Unless it doesn’t accurately represent the topic, which happens, and then a researcher chooses not to read the text based on the chatbot’s summary.

              Nirvana fallacy.

              All these chatbots do is guess. I’m just saying a researcher might as well cut out the hallucinating middleman.

      • Lvxferre@mander.xyz
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        4 months ago

        No, it’s just rambling. My bad.

        I focused too much on using AI to summarise and ended not talking about it summarising documents, even if the text is about the later.

        And… well, the later is such a dumb idea that I don’t feel like telling people “the text is right, don’t do that”, it’s obvious.

  • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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    4 months ago

    Ok? I don’t have another human available to skim a shitload of documents for me to find answers I need and I don’t have time to do ot myself. AI is my best option.

    • s3p5r@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      So long as you don’t care about whether they’re the right or relevant answers, you do you, I guess. Did you use AI to read the linked post too?

      • lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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        4 months ago

        I didn’t read the post at all because its premise is irrelevant to my situation. If I had another human to read documentation for me I would do that. I don’t so the next best thing is AI. I have to double check its findings but it gets me 95% of the way there and saves hours of work. It’s a useful tool.

      • jaemo@sh.itjust.works
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        4 months ago

        Yep. Go ahead and ignore all the cases where it’s getting answers correct and actually helping. We’re all just hallucinating, it’s in no way my lived experience. Your reality is the prime reality and we’re the NPC’s.

  • z00s@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    The problem is not the LLMs, but what people are trying to do with them.

    They are currently spoons, but people are desperately wishing they were katanas.

    They work really well for soup, but they can’t cut steak. But they’re being hyped as super ninja steak knives, and people are getting pissed when they can’t cut steak.

    If you give them watery, soupy tasks they can do successfully, they can lighten your workload, as long as you’re aware of what they are and aren’t good at.

    What people want LLMs to be able to do, ie. “Steak” tasks:

    • write complex documents

    • apply complex knowledge/rules to a situation

    • Write complex code and create entire programs based on vague description

    What LLMs can currently do ie. “Soup” tasks:

    • check this document and fix all spelling, punctuation and grammatical errors

    • summarise this paragraph as dot points

    • write a python program that sorts my photographs into folders based on the year they were taken

    Half of Lemmy is hyping katanas, the other half is yelling “Why won’t my spoon cut this steak?!! AI is so dumb!!!”

    Update: wow, the pure vitriol pouring out of the replies is just stunning. Seems there are a lot of you out there who have, in one way or another, tied your ego very strongly to either the success or failure of AI.

    Take a step back, friends, and go outside for a while.

  • RagnarokOnline@programming.dev
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    4 months ago

    I had GPT 3.5 break down 6x 45-minute verbatim interviews into bulleted summaries and it did great. I even asked it to anonymize people’s names and it did that too. I did re-read the summaries to make sure no duplicate info or hallucinations existed and it only needed a couple of corrections.

    Beats manually summarizing that info myself.

    Maybe their prompt sucks?

    • David Gerard@awful.systemsOPM
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      4 months ago

      I got AcausalRobotGPT to summarise your post and it said “I’m not saying it’s always programming.dev, but”

          • froztbyte@awful.systems
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            4 months ago

            it makes me feel fucking ancient to find that this dipshit didn’t seem to get the remark, and it wasn’t even that long ago

        • Steve@awful.systems
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          4 months ago

          “tools” doesn’t mean “good”

          good tools are designed well enough so it’s clear how they are used, held, or what-fucking-ever.

          fuck these simpleton takes are a pain in the arse. They’re always pushed by these idiots that have based their whole world view on fortune cookie aphorisms

    • TexasDrunk@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      I also use it for that pretty often. I always double check and usually it’s pretty good. Once in a great while it turns the summary into a complete shitshow but I always catch it on a reread, ask a second time, and it fixes things up. My biggest problem is that I’m dragged into too many useless meetings every week and this saves a ton of time over rereading entire transcripts and doing a poor job of summarizing because I have real work to get back to.

      I also use it as a rubber duck. It works pretty well if you tell it what it’s doing and tell it to ask questions.

        • self@awful.systems
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          4 months ago

          what if your rubber duck released just an entire fuckton of CO2 into the environment constantly, even when you weren’t talking to it? surely that means it’s better