• glimse@lemmy.world
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      3 months ago

      Kind of silly to call people stupid for not following the emergence of LLMs. My friend knows everything there is to know about HVAC from best practices to the actual physics of it and I had to tell him the pitfalls of relying on chatgpt and the like for anything. His boss was raving about it and he’s not a compurer nerd so he thought it was a really advanced search engine. Not stupid, just not his forte.

      • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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        3 months ago

        I get your point but i wouldnt try to install an HVAC system or try to drive a car without a drivers license. I think its fair to expect some degree of critical thinking from adult people. I dont expect non tech poeople to intuitively understand it, but if you spend 5 minutes reading the wikipedia page about chatgpt, then you would realise its not “just” a search engine.

        But yeah i know that at the end of the day, the average person has simply been lulled into believing that modern tech is magic and can just be trusted for no reason other than it being popular. So its not really their fault but they are still responsible for their own actions. Trying to shift blame to google, as much as i hate them, is just absurd.

        • candybrie@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          The equivalent of reading the top answer on Google isn’t installing an HVAC system. It’s turning on the AC. I bet most people who do that don’t know much about how they work. If your landlord got the AC replaced with something “new and better” but it still blew cold when you turned it on, I doubt most people do anything different than what they were already doing unless they experienced bad results.

        • skulblaka@sh.itjust.works
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          3 months ago

          I get your point but i wouldnt try to install an HVAC system or try to drive a car without a drivers license.

          You would if you knew nothing about them, and the manufacturing company insists that you can safely and easily use the product with no training.

        • MotoAsh@lemmy.world
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          3 months ago

          No. No it is NOT absurd.

          If someone, especially an ostensibly reputable company, is selling poison, they should be on the hook for selling poison. Period. End of discussion.

          “butbut people should see others dying and not drink the poison!”

          No. No, it IS NOT the customer’s fault for being duped by false advertisement. Fuck, you want to live in a hellscape where evil is shrugged off as, “should’ve known better.”

          Fuck that, and fuck anyone naive enough to defend such a jouvenile, ignorant position.

          • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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            3 months ago

            They are not offering poison tho. They are offering a product that does exactly what its supposed to do. There is no evil here, there is no wrongdoing. Its just a bad, incomplete system.

            Also i havent heard of any promise or advertisement of these things being all knowing perfect information databases. Thats just what people tend to think because it is beyond their comprehension.

            The real hellscape would be a world where you cant create anything new because someone might abuse your invention somehow.

    • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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      3 months ago

      Then don’t look up I guess.

      The problem on its broadest is if companies put out shitty products and the line still goes up, then the line going up does not mean the economy is producing what we need efficiently. That means the system is obviously broken. Maybe the system never worked in the first place.

      • unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de
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        3 months ago

        The line going up has never meant that a company is working in the publics favour. The system has always been broken, the only way to win is to not rely on big companies and their products as much as you possibly can.

        Anyone that unironically relies on LLM outputs to guide their decisions is responsible for the outcome themselves.