Comment on A cheat sheet for why using ChatGPT is not bad for the environment
Vanth@reddthat.com 1 week ago
Is environmental impact on the top of anyones list for why they don’t like ChatGPT? It’s not on mine nor on anyones I have talked to.
The two most common reasons I hear are 1) no trust in the companies hosting the tools to protect consumers and 2) rampant theft of IP to train LLM models.
The author moves away from strict environmental focus despite claims to the contrary in their intro,
This post is not about the broader climate impacts of AI beyond chatbots, or about whether AI is bad for other reasons
[…]
Other Objections, This is all a gimmick anyway. Why not just use Google? ChatGPT doesn’t give better information
… yet doesn’t address the most common criticisms.
Worse, the author accuses anyone who pauses to think of the negatives of ChatGPT of being absurdly illogical.
Being around a lot of adults freaking out over 3 Wh feels like I’m in a dream reality. It has the logic of a bad dream. Everyone is suddenly fixating on this absurd concept or rule that you can’t get a grasp of, and scolding you for not seeing the same thing. Posting long blog posts is my attempt to get out of the weird dream reality this discourse has created.
IDK what logical fallacy this is but claiming people are “freaking out over 3Wh” is very disingenuous.
Rating as basic content: 2/10, poor and disingenuous argument
Rating as example of AI writing: 5/10, I’ve certainly seen worse AI slop
anus@lemmy.world 1 week ago
Thank you for your considered and articulate comment
What do you think about the significant difference in attitude between comments here and in (quite serious) programming communities like lobste.rs/…/cheat_sheet_for_why_using_chatgpt_is_…
Are we in different echo chambers? Is chatgpt a uniquely powerful tool for programmers? Is social media a fundamentally Luddite mechanism?
Vanth@reddthat.com 1 week ago
You’re on an open forum here, versus a substack where people are encouraged to subscribe and donate to writers they like.
Which do you think is more likely to offer comments with narrow perspectives?
anus@lemmy.world 1 week ago
I think I’m on board with arguing against how LLMs are being owned and managed, so I don’t really have much to say
Rooki@lemmy.world 1 week ago
I would say GitHub copilot ( that uses a gpt model ) uses more Wh than chatgpt, because it gets blasted more queries on average because the “AI” autocomplete just triggers almost every time you stop typing or on random occasions.
anus@lemmy.world 1 week ago
I don’t think this answers the question