Something where people can truly believe what is being shown because it has hard evidence and the user can decide what they want for themselves.
There has to be a way for a news site to establish a way for it to verify fact. So when Fox says one things, CNN says another - you can go to this one particular website thats not hosted by Google or anything similar, and can watch the actual video of what is being talked about and you can cut through the opinions and political bias. Something where people can truly believe what is being shown because it has hard evidence and the user can decide what they want for themselves.
sucralose is safe imoThey also said artifical sweetners were safe, WMDs were in Iraq, and Anna Nicole married for love.
There has to be a way for a news site to establish a way for it to verify fact. So when Fox says one things, CNN says another - you can go to this one particular website thats not hosted by Google or anything similar, and can watch the actual video of what is being talked about and you can cut through the opinions and political bias. Something where people can truly believe what is being shown because it has hard evidence and the user can decide what they want for themselves.
They look like sane rules or am i missing something ?
Ideally the latter. The former will happen instead.I work in educational publishing / digital course materials and this is an absolute game-changer. I do not say this lightly. Within the past 24 hours I was able to take a .pdf of a chapter of a Modern Physics textbook and have ChatGPT-4 (low temp) create a full Solution and Answer Guide for every problem at the end of the chapter. The work is far superior to what I have seen from Subject Matter Expert vendors and, if I am being completely honest, far better than I myself would have made. This is several weeks worth of work and several thousand dollars in expense completely replaced by about $5 in Open.AI credits.
This has the potential to completely eradicate 'academic grunt labor' as I call it. We are, however, at an inflection point. Do we have the language models and chatbots do all this work, fire everyone and call it a day OR do we make use of this tool to eradicate the drudgery and free people to do a heck of a lot more actual innovating?
How do you know the solutions are correct?I work in educational publishing / digital course materials and this is an absolute game-changer. I do not say this lightly. Within the past 24 hours I was able to take a .pdf of a chapter of a Modern Physics textbook and have ChatGPT-4 (low temp) create a full Solution and Answer Guide for every problem at the end of the chapter. The work is far superior to what I have seen from Subject Matter Expert vendors and, if I am being completely honest, far better than I myself would have made. This is several weeks worth of work and several thousand dollars in expense completely replaced by about $5 in Open.AI credits.
This has the potential to completely eradicate 'academic grunt labor' as I call it. We are, however, at an inflection point. Do we have the language models and chatbots do all this work, fire everyone and call it a day OR do we make use of this tool to eradicate the drudgery and free people to do a heck of a lot more actual innovating?
How do you know the solutions are correct?
It is all about the input. Apparently it is difficult to prevent all forms of input from gaining a desired result. I posted an example of this in the writer's guild strike post.The rules say it's not supposed to list or discuss the rules but the user got both to do that anyway. Interesting peek under the hood and an indication of how hard it may turn out to be to get AI to stick to any restrictions.
I think people overestimate the value of the criticism that LLMs produce good looking bullshit. If its as good looking as the other bullshit available, and it takes much less time and money to produce, it wins.
Did you validate the questions / solutions?I work in educational publishing / digital course materials and this is an absolute game-changer. I do not say this lightly. Within the past 24 hours I was able to take a .pdf of a chapter of a Modern Physics textbook and have ChatGPT-4 (low temp) create a full Solution and Answer Guide for every problem at the end of the chapter. The work is far superior to what I have seen from Subject Matter Expert vendors and, if I am being completely honest, far better than I myself would have made. This is several weeks worth of work and several thousand dollars in expense completely replaced by about $5 in Open.AI credits.
This has the potential to completely eradicate 'academic grunt labor' as I call it. We are, however, at an inflection point. Do we have the language models and chatbots do all this work, fire everyone and call it a day OR do we make use of this tool to eradicate the drudgery and free people to do a heck of a lot more actual innovating?