Just checked, it sure does say that! AI spouting nonsense is nothing new, but it’s pretty ironic that a large language model can’t even parse what letters are in a word.
It’s because, for the most part, it doesn’t actually have access to the text itself. Before the data gets to the “thinking” part of the network, the words and letters have been stripped out and replaced with vectors. The vectors capture a lot of aspects of the meaning of words, but not much of their actual text structure.
Well I mean it’s a statistics machine with a seed thrown in to get different results on different runs. So really, it models the structure of language, but not the meaning. Kinda useless.
Connedicut.
I wondered if this has been fixed. Not only has it not, the AI has added Nebraska.
What about Our Kansas? Cause according to Google Arkansas has one o in it. Refreshing the page changes the answer though.
Just checked, it sure does say that! AI spouting nonsense is nothing new, but it’s pretty ironic that a large language model can’t even parse what letters are in a word.
It’s because, for the most part, it doesn’t actually have access to the text itself. Before the data gets to the “thinking” part of the network, the words and letters have been stripped out and replaced with vectors. The vectors capture a lot of aspects of the meaning of words, but not much of their actual text structure.
Well I mean it’s a statistics machine with a seed thrown in to get different results on different runs. So really, it models the structure of language, but not the meaning. Kinda useless.
You mean Connecdicud.
I would assume it uses a different random seed for every query. Probably fixed sometimes, not fixed other times.