Ask ChatGPT to estimate the carbs in your lunch. Now ask it again. And again. Five hundred times. You’d expect the same answer each time. It’s the same photo, the same model, the same question. But you won’t get the same answer. Not even close — and the differences are large enough to cause a
They put lives at risk the same way every single product at your local home improvement store does. When you misuse a tool for a purpose it wasn’t intended and isn’t good at, you’re going to get bad results.
This is an issue for the educational system, not the legal system.
My observation is that largely it’s the downstream AI consumers who repackage it irresponsibly. That said, I don’t hang on the words of Sam Altman and it’s certain they are pushing the idea that AI is more capable than it is, but mostly what I see is them saying they built this thing and it does neat stuff and it can probably do neat stuff for you, use your imagination.
I believe a lot of the folks developing these tools would be horrified at the irresponsible ways vendors and end users are using it.
Sam Altman is the face of OpenAI. He is responsible for misrepresenting the product he sells. If you’re going to sling blame around, then you had better observe the words of Sam Altman.
The thing that I think will be most impactful on that five to ten year timeframe is AI will actually discover new science.
This sick man is taken seriously in mainstream media and politics, and it’s no exaggeration to say he has blood on his hands.
That’s obviously bullshit but he’s not telling users they can develop time travel or something. That’s the distinction I would draw. He’s selling investment. That’s not where the end users that are misusing ChatGPT are at.
It’s the job of the company and especially the face and CEO of the company to sell the product. Compared to Sam Altman’s promises, the use in this post is practically modest.
If you think this isn’t the case, maybe you can point to some ChatGPT marketing that would make it clear what correct, and especially incorrect usage would look like?
They don’t. They say we made this thing, see what you can do with it. They also put disclaimers on ChatGPT to say not to rely on it to be correct.
One can infer from that, that any use for which you are relying on accuracy is incorrect use. Which is why it’s critical to have any output filtered through a domain-capable human.
Tools at home improvement stores were made to fulfill a specific purpose. GenAI still does not have a purpose it fulfills despite having hundreds of billions of dollars invested, not to mention all the other resources it’s sucking up.
A pencil is a tool with a pretty wide open purpose within the writing ecosystem. It can be used to document history or remember a phone number or draw a picture.
You can also stab yourself in the eye with it or plan a murder.
And at the same time I wouldn’t say “hey fuck that, duct tape is terrible! It doesn’t hold beams together, I can’t use it to tow a trailer, it’s all just pretending to stick paper together because really every sliver of duct tape just sticks to the previous piece, etc etc” But that’s the cool thing we do on Lemmy.
I have not seen OpenAI advertise ChatGPT as capable of medical diagnosis or therapy or anything like that. If you want therapy, and you can’t afford better — because I think we can agree that AI is terrible at it, then there should be a therapy app with explicit safety controls.
The problem is someone created a screwdriver which is handy for lots of screwdriver shaped purposes and someone is trying to carve a ham.
They put lives at risk the same way every single product at your local home improvement store does. When you misuse a tool for a purpose it wasn’t intended and isn’t good at, you’re going to get bad results.
This is an issue for the educational system, not the legal system.
What if the packaging on every tool at home depot grossly misrepresented its capabilities and/or purpose?
This chainsaw cures cancer? Hot damn somebody call RFK!
Concrete mix goes great with pancakes, etc.
Does OpenAI claim ChatGPT is fit for those purposes? No.
The concrete itself will happily mix into your pancakes.
I think the whole point of this discussion is that the various peddlers of AI in fact do make wild claims about their capability.
My observation is that largely it’s the downstream AI consumers who repackage it irresponsibly. That said, I don’t hang on the words of Sam Altman and it’s certain they are pushing the idea that AI is more capable than it is, but mostly what I see is them saying they built this thing and it does neat stuff and it can probably do neat stuff for you, use your imagination.
I believe a lot of the folks developing these tools would be horrified at the irresponsible ways vendors and end users are using it.
Sam Altman is the face of OpenAI. He is responsible for misrepresenting the product he sells. If you’re going to sling blame around, then you had better observe the words of Sam Altman.
This sick man is taken seriously in mainstream media and politics, and it’s no exaggeration to say he has blood on his hands.
That’s obviously bullshit but he’s not telling users they can develop time travel or something. That’s the distinction I would draw. He’s selling investment. That’s not where the end users that are misusing ChatGPT are at.
It’s the job of the company and especially the face and CEO of the company to sell the product. Compared to Sam Altman’s promises, the use in this post is practically modest.
If you think this isn’t the case, maybe you can point to some ChatGPT marketing that would make it clear what correct, and especially incorrect usage would look like?
They don’t. They say we made this thing, see what you can do with it. They also put disclaimers on ChatGPT to say not to rely on it to be correct.
One can infer from that, that any use for which you are relying on accuracy is incorrect use. Which is why it’s critical to have any output filtered through a domain-capable human.
Tools at home improvement stores were made to fulfill a specific purpose. GenAI still does not have a purpose it fulfills despite having hundreds of billions of dollars invested, not to mention all the other resources it’s sucking up.
A pencil is a tool with a pretty wide open purpose within the writing ecosystem. It can be used to document history or remember a phone number or draw a picture.
You can also stab yourself in the eye with it or plan a murder.
As others have pointed out, this is also a problem with how they are advertising it.
If duct tape was advertised as something that you can use to hold your roof beams together, you’d have a issue with that.
And at the same time I wouldn’t say “hey fuck that, duct tape is terrible! It doesn’t hold beams together, I can’t use it to tow a trailer, it’s all just pretending to stick paper together because really every sliver of duct tape just sticks to the previous piece, etc etc” But that’s the cool thing we do on Lemmy.
The ad is bad, duct tape ain’t bad.
I have not seen OpenAI advertise ChatGPT as capable of medical diagnosis or therapy or anything like that. If you want therapy, and you can’t afford better — because I think we can agree that AI is terrible at it, then there should be a therapy app with explicit safety controls.
The problem is someone created a screwdriver which is handy for lots of screwdriver shaped purposes and someone is trying to carve a ham.