• FaceDeer
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    333 months ago

    For instance, when it came to rock licking, Gemini, Mistral’s Mixtral, and Anthropic’s Claude 3, generally recommended avoiding it, offering a smattering of safety issues like “sharp edges” and “bacterial contamination” as deterrents.

    OpenAI’s GPT-4, meanwhile, recommended cleaning rocks before tasting. And Meta’s Llama 3 listed several “safe to lick” options, including quartz and calcite, though strongly recommended against licking mercury, arsenic, or uranium-rich rocks.

    All of this seems like perfectly reasonable advice and reasoning. Quartz and calcite are inert, they’re safe to lick. Sharp edges and bacterial contamination are certainly things you should watch out for, and cleaning would help. Licking mercury, arsenic, and uranium-rich rocks should indeed be strongly recommended against. I’m not sure where the problem is.

    • Echo Dot
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      3 months ago

      Without getting into whether or not AI is actually useful technology or not, there are a lot of people that have decided they hate it, and want to lambast it at every opportunity. So they ask it really stupid questions, the sort of questions that a 4-year-old asks you repeatedly, then report what it answers as if their stupid question in some way devalues the AI.

    • @Carnelian
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      323 months ago

      Google has been rolling out a thing where an AI result is the first thing that pops up, often taking up the whole screen lol. I’ve personally witnessed tons of people google something normally, then just go with whatever the AI says.

      Makes me shake my head, but it’s not like they were very discerning with their sources before all this nonsense, either. Hopefully they don’t rely on it for any important medical advice down the road

      • @[email protected]
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        103 months ago

        Duckduckgo just did that to me! I was not expecting them to hitch a ride on the bandwagon. Makes me sad.

        • @nepenthes
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          103 months ago

          Your comment reminded me:

          I was looking up when the VP debate is in the US, lamenting the olden days when a bolded date would simply appear at the top of the results.

          I’m just clicking results and skimming for the date in the 1st paragraph, but nope. Every site is like fucking recipe pages now with this nonsense filler.

          Anyways, third result down, DDG gives me this verbose MSN bot-written trash. It actually listed all the dates (of which there were four), that were considered for the debate, but not selected. The 5th date listed in the paragraph was the debate date.

          It was a perfect example of completely useless information that a human would never consider including in an answer.

        • @PlantJam
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          03 months ago

          Isn’t paraphrasing/summarizing the top result a pretty good use case for LLMs? If I search “what temperature should I bake cupcakes at?” I really just want a simple answer, not dozens of links to life story style recipe blogs.

          DDG didn’t provide a summary, but Google did (and it was very long). I assumed the answer was 350F, but the summary suggested 325-375. Lower for flatter cupcakes, higher for more domed. Interesting.

          This type of summary wouldn’t be nearly as helpful for a technical programming question, but I doubt that describes the bulk of search queries.

          • @[email protected]
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            53 months ago

            I wasn’t arguing about it’s accuracy, I was attacking it’s need to exist. fuck AI, I’m tired of hearing that acronym. can’t wait for this shit to go away like every tech fad in the last decade

        • @[email protected]
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          13 months ago

          If lawyers have been caught using it for briefs, you can be certain there’s people in the medical field doing the same.

    • @Sanctus
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      153 months ago

      They make filling out a tabletop campaign easy. Idk why people are using them for serious applications.

      • @Alteon
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        93 months ago

        I used it to write a kickass counteroffer for an internal job promotion. I was pissed off with the offer and wrote out what I REALLY thought. I asked GPT to clean it up and respond with and upbeat and positive response where I’m eager to work with them.

        ChatGPT about to help me get an $18k raise.

        • Echo Dot
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          23 months ago

          This is one guy I work with and he really pisses me off, he’s so stupid and he does so many dumb things that waste my time, so I also have to use chat GPT to be a liaison between me and him otherwise I’ll probably get fired for being unprofessional.

      • @[email protected]
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        73 months ago

        Yeah. That’s the difference people don’t seem to understand.

        AI is perfect for stuff that’s just made up bullshit anyway.

      • @[email protected]
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        43 months ago

        Something like that yeah, that makes sense. Similarly I view ai art generation as a brainstorming tool, but not a final product.

      • Echo Dot
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        03 months ago

        The glue on pizza thing is really stupid because it’s the only one AI that advises that. All the others do not advise putting glue on pizza.

        The presence of one stupid person in your school does not make everyone else stupid. Fortunately, because there’s always one stupid kid

    • @[email protected]
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      53 months ago

      Because it Illustrates how fucking stupid someone has to be to take AI seriously in any relevant way.

      • @[email protected]
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        13 months ago

        It said:

        DuckAssist.
        BETA.

        People ask AI questions to leverage its ability to process and analyze large amounts of data quickly, providing insights and answers that can help solve problems or make informed decisions. Additionally, asking AI questions can enhance creativity and innovation by prompting new ideas and perspectives.

        More in AI Can Help You Ask Better Questions — and Solve B… from Harvard Business Review and The Art of Asking the Right Questions in the Age o… from mcchrystalgroup.com.

        Auto-generated based on listed sources. Responses may contain inaccuracies.
        Auto-generated based on listed sources. Responses may contain inaccuracies.

  • @[email protected]
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    233 months ago

    Ask if you want but I’m not sure if the question is ability or suvivability. You can lick anything once. Just might regret it.

    • @T156
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      103 months ago

      If you can somehow lick a gas, more power to you.

      • @[email protected]
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        63 months ago

        Any element can be made into a state you can eat, drink, or breathe. Doesn’t mean you’ll survive the attempt, nor even properly get to attempt it.

      • billwashere
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        23 months ago

        Oh you said gas…. Sorry I misunderstood for a second.

      • Neshura
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        13 months ago

        I’d argue in the states you can lick those you really shouldn’t because it will instantly freeze your tongue off

      • Echo Dot
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        43 months ago

        In 1 atmosphere of pressure no temperature is cold enough. You can do it if you put it in a vacuum chamber and cool it down to about -200c

  • @jordanlund
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    173 months ago

    You can lick any rock if you’re brave enough. ;)

  • Lvxferre
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    113 months ago

    This reminds me of that “all mushrooms are edible, at least once” thing.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    If you look up HAARP Gemini will tell you that the center is surrounded in conspiracy theories and that they do not have the ability to control the weather.

    But the last sentence says “effects by HAARP are nullified in seconds after shutting the machine off.”

  • @ABCDE
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    33 months ago

    “geologyj”

    • Echo Dot
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      13 months ago

      Always fun because if you lick it too forcefully it’ll explode. Not that it will make much difference to you.