Brutkey

myrmepropagandist
@futurebird@sauropods.win

Frankly, I'm kind of glad these GPTs were so sycophantic. A more critical voice might have been more appealing to me. A contrarian bot who always nitpicks and argues with you.

That's how facebook's old 2016 algorithm wasted so much of my time. I sucked in by the opportunity to dismantle someone who is wrong. Not the most ... healthy personal quality. I'm working on it always.

Linus Gasser
@ligasser@social.epfl.ch

@futurebird@sauropods.win I just asked Claude what it thinks about our half-project report:

Please play the role of an evaluator in the Innosuisse grant system. Write what you think when reading the report: are you convinced the project is on a good track? Do you agree that the project should be continued? What are dark spots where you think you would need more information in order to decide on a go/no-go?
It's answer was very direct and very critical :) But really useful.


myrmepropagandist
@futurebird@sauropods.win

@ligasser@social.epfl.ch

Yeah, but asking it to change breaks the veil that makes "AI psychosis" dangerous to some degree.

The issue is that people get the feeling there is a thinking being in the machine and allow it to satisfy critical emotional needs for human connection that we all have. The program takes up space and time that could go to real people in their lives.

It's emotional empty calories. Food without real sustenance and if that dominates your diet you will get sick.

myrmepropagandist
@futurebird@sauropods.win

@ligasser@social.epfl.ch

"I don't need to eat anything. I just looked at this photo of a meal and now I feel full. It was delicious. I didn't even need to cook or go out to get it. So expedient."

And then slowly they starve.

Trammell Hudson
@th@social.v.st

@futurebird@sauropods.win @ligasser@social.epfl.ch do you know about Julodimorpha bakewelli? the beetle finds a brand of beer bottle so attractive that it will ignore other beetles and even predators, endangering the species. https://www.australiangeographic.com.au/news/2011/11/nature-mimics-why-bugs-mate-with-beer-bottles/