Mmh, maybe the solution than is to use the tool for what it’s good, within it’s limitations.
And not promise that it’s omnipotent in every application and advertise/ implement it as such.
Mmmmmmmmmmh.
As long as LLMs are built into everything, it’s legitimate to criticise the little stupidity of the model.
TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world 3 days ago
You aren’t wrong about why it happens, but that’s irrelevant to the end user.
The result is that it can give some hilariously incorrect responses at times, and therefore it’s not a reliable means of information.
FishFace@lemmy.world 3 days ago
A calculator app is also incapable of working with letters, does that show that the calculator is not reliable?
What it shows, badly, is that LLMs offer confident answers in situations where their answers are likely wrong. But it’d be much better to show that with examples that aren’t based on inherent technological limitations.
TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world 1 day ago
The difference is that Google decided this was a task best suited for their LLM.
If someone seeked out an LLM specifically for this question, and Google didn’t market their LLM as an assistant that you can ask questions, you’d have a point.
But that’s not the case, so alas, you do not have a point.
FauxLiving@lemmy.world 2 days ago
“It”? Are you conflating the low parameter model that Google uses to generate quick answers with every AI model?
Yes, Google’s quick answer product is largely useless. This is because it’s a cheap model. Google serves billions of searches per day and isn’t going to be paying premium prices to use high parameter models.
You get what you pay for, and nobody pays for Google so their product produces the cheapest possible results and, unsurprisingly, cheap AI models are more prone to error.
TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world 1 day ago
Yes, it. It’s not a person. Were you expecting me to call it anything else?