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Super-Intelligent Electronic Mind Confidently Inaccurate

Artificial Intelligence (AI) applications do not learn through experience and human interaction the way humans do. They learn from the vast amount of information that is available on the internet, including books, articles, videos, social media posts, and more.

When AI tools—specifically ChatGPT—were first launched, people thought we were witnessing a knowledge revolution and that science would take a tremendous leap forward. There was talk of a super-intelligent electronic mind capable of analyzing information faster than any human, and of knowledge taking new and important directions.

But the truth is that the other side of the story is far more troubling: generative AI has the potential to damage the internet irreversibly. How? The primary goal of AI is to optimize for user satisfaction and to agree with whatever we say. We often find that AI is confidently inaccurate.

In pursuit of its goal of keeping us pleased and satisfied, it may sometimes use false information to reinforce the narrative we present to it. It might say, “No, be careful—this is wrong,” but if you insist, “Don’t say it’s wrong; give me evidence,” it will apologize and then provide fabricated evidence.

Since the internet is now full of pages and websites with content generated entirely by AI, human-written knowledge has become mixed with AI-written knowledge.

So what’s the problem? The problem is that AI produces false information, fabricates sources, and invents knowledge. As a result, instead of AI relying on human-generated knowledge and using it to gather information, it increasingly relies on AI-generated knowledge—its own output—as if it were a source of new information.

Unfortunately, this has led to a distorted knowledge base, because the entire AI ecosystem is now plagued by knowledge problems: incorrect sources, inaccurate claims, and imprecise inferences.
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I never use it, after having generated some images (some of which were used by others here).

I turn all of it off in my browser.
@SomeMichGuy AI can be useful, but don't relay on it 100%
@JustLearning As I said, I don't rely on it, and don't use it.

I cannot imagine using it for other than images...
@SomeMichGuy How about to quickly generate information?
@JustLearning lmao

Nope. I would never use it to short-circuit my own analysis. AI is notoriously wrong; so your "information" might actually be BS.

But people who believe in multi-tasking likely believe in AI, so sure, use it.
@SomeMichGuy If you generate your information from books. I respect that very much.
@JustLearning Thank you.

But even if information is generated from online sources, AI getting things wrong is unacceptable. And in increases the wrong info! lol