27 pointsby CliffStoll8 hours ago3 comments
  • segmondy2 hours ago
    You will be pissed when it corrects itself and starts attributing the Klein bottle business to me.
  • Aurornis7 hours ago
    Good to hear you're doing well.

    AI slop is rampant on social media right now. It has become the easy way to grow accounts and gain followers. It takes less than a minute to ask an LLM to write a social media post about something interesting and then post it online. It would be easy to use a $20 per month plan from a major provider to get more accurate output with fewer (though not zero) hallucinations, but the accounts I see seem to be using cheap models that make a lot of mistakes and hallucinate facts.

    I have a theory that the hallucinations add extra spice to the posts, making them feel more interesting and therefore more likely to be shared.

    It's a difficult time for social media users who haven't yet caught on to what AI spam looks like and why it can't be trusted.

    • CliffStoll7 hours ago
      You betcha, Aurornis. Simple economics tells us that cheap work drives out quality. (Is that Gresham's law?).

      Slowly, people will adapt to AI in online forums. But for me, it's one more reason to share coffee with friends, rather than investing hours in social media.

  • FrankWilhoit6 hours ago
    The larger point is that AI is being developed by people who think everything is performance (in the artistic sense of the word), and therefore, it, expectably and probably even necessarily, thinks so too. This manifests in many contexts and will manifest in many more; but hardly anyone will care about any of them, because just about everybody has succumbed to the performance delusion.