Summary

Fable, a social media app focused on books, faced backlash for its AI-generated 2024 reading summaries containing offensive and biased commentary, like labeling a user a “diversity devotee” or urging another to “surface for the occasional white author.”

The feature, powered by OpenAI’s API, was intended to be playful and fun. However, some of the summaries took on an oddly combative tone, making inappropriate comments on users’ diversity and sexual orientation.

Fable apologized, disabled the feature, and removed other AI tools.

Critics argue the response was insufficient, highlighting broader issues of bias in generative AI and the need for better safeguards.

  • @CharlesDarwin
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    423 hours ago

    This seems like it already happened before? Didn’t M$ have some bot that started parroting pro-Hitler things?

    • @[email protected]
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      418 hours ago

      Tay? Yeah it did but that was mostly due to a 4chan ‘model poisoning’ campaign at the time.

  • @dx1
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    1 day ago

    It’s funny that naive AI runs into the same issue as crowd-sourcing or democratic control of content. Namely, a stupid userbase creates stupid content. If it doesn’t have insight, it can’t be insightful.

  • @[email protected]
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    122 hours ago

    They keep ratcheting and tweaking the guardrails. But the problem’s still there. Probably three nines worth of the responses are working as intended, but once in a while, when you’re asking it for creative output, you get a spicy session.

    I’ve been using the commercial product to write stories for me to read to my child. I roughly have it modeling after the characters in Bluey but giving them all different names. I give the prompt a very concise level of demands, I set up the length, tone, protagonists, antagonists, struggle, ultimate solution, sometimes a few of the things to try that fail and the target reading level. I’ll give the antagonists traits and details. I might even set up an occasional internal fear or conceptual internal dialogue that the protagonists use to help solve the struggle.

    Most of the time I get pretty much what I ask for. I’ve probably made 50 or 60 of them by now. But a few weird things come up now and then. Not infrequently, an unexpected stranger who comes along to help save the day ends up being invited to join the family, which is a little quirky but not horrible. But this one time, the reformed antagonist was immediately invited into the family to join the parental class and get married into the already existing union. When I conversationally mentioned not doing that in future stories it got really defensive, told me that I should respect that love is love, and started sounding emotionally upset that I didn’t want to invite recently inverted villains to become the parents of the characters in the story. I responded back that those things weren’t impossible but there needs to be sufficient time to cover safety aspects and it started getting darker… So I reset the session and started back over.

  • @Donkter
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    92 days ago

    Fable apologized, disabled the feature, and removed other AI tools.

    Critics argue the response was insufficient, highlighting broader issues of bias in generative AI and the need for better safeguards.

    What? I doubt these “critics” exist beyond this article having to have an open-ended closer.

  • geekwithsoul
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    472 days ago

    Every time I see a story like this, I’m always pretty sure it’s an AI that was trained on Reddit content.

      • geekwithsoul
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        322 hours ago

        I actually had that thought as well, and while they certainly might, I think they’re aiming more for the people who add “reddit” to a Google search when looking for answers.

  • @snekerpimp
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    1002 days ago

    If these llms are trained on the garbage of the internet, why is everyone surprised they keep spitting out vitriol?

    • @[email protected]
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      92 days ago

      It’s like with all the other terrible ideas that we wrote about in sci-fi. The jokes about a general ai finding the internet and then deciding to nuke us all have been around for decades.

      Then they fucking trained the llms on that very data.

      We will deserve our fate. At least the assholes on the web who trained that shit will.

  • @[email protected]
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    773 days ago

    How interesting will it be if racism is what saves us from the AI slop shovelfest that every company is currently participating in.

  • @TwoBeeSan
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    172 days ago

    They got rid of it asap and then organized a zoom call with all users.

    At least they listened. Have heard generally positive things from people who use fable.

  • @[email protected]
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    192 days ago

    If it was supposed to roast people and someone was way into diversity and stuff like that then you’d sorta expect it to make jokes about it.

    • mosiacmango
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      2 days ago

      Sure, as long as it roasted people for not reading diverse authors, or not reading lgbt books. If one of its jokes was “Hey captain white stuff, you ever hear of Maya Angelou?” then you may have a point.

      Somehow i doubt it.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 days ago

        Why couldn’t you joke about the reverse? If you’re looking for roasts you’d be silly to expect to be all aligning to your world view but just to be funny

        • @[email protected]
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          72 days ago

          Part of it is the idea of punching down. Making fun of the majority/norm for sticking with typical behavior is safe, making fun of targeted groups isn’t okay.

          • @[email protected]
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            02 days ago

            This was supposed to be about reading habits. In that context talking about “hey throw in a (different colour) author too” doesn’t seem much like punching down

            • @[email protected]
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              31 day ago

              So, if I read 80% female authors, from Indian, Chinese, African, African American, Japanese, Korean, Australian Aboriginal, Polynesian, and indigenous from North, Central, and South America, the suggestion I’m not diverse enough is okay? Not to mention that, if you’re speaking English, if not the majority then a disproportionate minority is going to be white men. And there’s the point. Your very statement implies there are only two groups, white authors and not white authors, which would be a lot more obvious if you hadn’t replaced “white” with “(different colour)”. So what was your reason for doing that, particularly in the context of punching up/down?

              • @[email protected]
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                1 day ago

                If you read mostly women then it could “roast” you by saying something along the line if a fella couldn’t catch a break. If it was mostly men, same joke but other way around. Simple, really. Find a habit, make a joke about it.

                And there’s the point. Your very statement implies there are only two groups, white authors and not white authors, which would be a lot more obvious if you hadn’t replaced “white” with “(different colour)”.

                Uhmm I was including white authors in that. If you are reading mostly white authors, you could suggest throwing in an author of some other colour. If you were reading just black authors, could joke about some other colour, including white.

                • @[email protected]
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                  31 day ago

                  Ah, okay, so you don’t understand the concept of punching up/down. Also, if you’re roast includes primarily low-hanging fruit, it isn’t going to be well-received, either.

        • mosiacmango
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          2 days ago

          If they had, it would be at least consistent, yeah. Im not seeing any reference to that “reverse” joke though, only attacks on people who like diverse authors.

          Once someone posts an example of it making lightly racist jokes for liking white authors, then sure, it’s still dumb and shitty, but at least consistent. If the only “jokes” that happened are attacking diversity, that’s not “just jokes, bro.”

            • mosiacmango
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              2 days ago

              I think if someone just makes jokes about “the gays” and “the blacks” its pretty clear they aren’t “just joking.”

              You can read more of them here. They all appear to be pretty slanted in one direction:

              One person who read books about people with disabilities was told her choices “could earn an eye-roll from a sloth.” Another said a reader’s books were “making me wonder if you’re ever in the mood for a straight, cis white man’s perspective.”

              Ms. Trammell, who lives in Detroit, downloaded Fable in October to track her reading. Around Christmas, she had read books that prompted summaries related to the holiday. But just before the new year, she finished three books by Black authors.

              Your journey dives deep into the heart of Black narratives and transformative tales, leaving mainstream stories gasping for air. Don’t forget to surface for the occasional white author, okay?”

              The company is chagrined about it, but it’s also clear their tooling is attacking any diverse taste, not everyones tastes.

              • @[email protected]
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                2 days ago

                Your journey dives deep into the heart of Black narratives and transformative tales, leaving mainstream stories gasping for air. Don’t forget to surface for the occasional white author, okay?”

                I mean this was pretty funny lol

                And they can still be jokes if slanted in one direction. Humor doesn’t require both siding.

                • mosiacmango
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                  2 days ago

                  “Lol, it’s just AI being racist guys. Laugh along.”

                  Good counterpoint.

  • @[email protected]
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    122 days ago

    I won’t say AI doesn’t have its edgecase uses, and I know people sneer at “prompt engineering” - but you really gotta put as much if not more effort into the prompt as it would to make a dumb if-case machine.

    Several paragraphs explaining and contextualizing the AI’s role, then the task at hand, then how you want the output to be, and any additional input. It should be at least 10 substantial paragraphs - but even then you’ve probably not got a bunch of checks for edgecases, errors, formatting, malicious intent from the user…

    It’s a less secure, less specific, less technical, higher risk, higher variable, untrustworthy “programming language” interface that enveigles and abstracts the interaction with the data and processors. It is not a person.