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myrmepropagandist

@marshray @emilymbender

Actions:

-do not display AI responses to questions typed into search engines at the top as if they are the definitive response.
-demote pages that use LLM generated content in searches and algorithms
-refrain from integrating AI responses for content questions in company chatbots.

there are a lot of ways this is actionable. Not often things individuals have control over, but this tech is being injected into all sorts of paces where it doesn't belong.

2 comments
Marsh Ray

@futurebird @emilymbender +1 agree.

We developed "typographic conventions" that allow us to reproduce the words of others with proper attribution. Japanese has a whole separate character used to write names and words of foreign origin.

We really ought to consider adopting such a convention for AI-generated text.

Those training the AI models are likely to find it incredibly useful as well.

Nazo

@marshray @futurebird @emilymbender Technically katakana was just what was used for Japanese a really really long time ago. As it completely fell out of use it was repurposed. In some ways it's like how we give Latin names to modern things.

EDIT: Well, I stand corrected. Wikipedia says it was for transliteration from the start.

Though that's from Wikipedia, so... 😁

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