with early “grieftech” entepreneur Helena Blavatsky

  • zbyte64@awful.systems
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    2 days ago

    Obviously they should have trained the AI on text from John Edwards’ Crossing Over. /s

    But seriously, I worry when one of these hacks figures out how to make the word multipliers approximate a cold reading.

  • FermiEstimate@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    Addressing the “in hell” response that made headlines at Sundance, Rohrer said the statement came after 85 back-and-forth exchanges in which Angel and the AI discussed long hours working in the “treatment center,” working with “mostly addicts.”

    We know 85 is the upper bound, but I wonder what Rohrer would consider the minimum number of “exchanges” acceptable for telling someone their loved one is in hell? Like, is 20 in “Hey, not cool” territory, but it’s all good once you get to 50? 40?

    Rohrer says that when Angel asked if Cameroun was working or haunting the treatment center in heaven, the AI responded, “Nope, in hell.”

    “They had already fully established that he wasn’t in heaven,” Rohrer said.

    Always a good sign when your best defense of the horrible thing your chatbot says is that it’s in context.

    • self@awful.systems
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      2 days ago

      it’s very telling that 85 messages is considered a lot. your grief better resolve quick before the model loses coherency and starts digging quotes out of a plagiarized horror movie script

      fuck it’s gross how one of the common use cases for LLMs is targeting vulnerable people with the hope they’ll develop a parasocial relationship with your service, so you can keep charging them forever

  • barsquid@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Neat little vignette about a vile sociopath scamming people in mourning. And, of course, zero consideration for the grieving people being scammed. “ChatGPT please help me feel like he’s still here,” “actually he is already in hell.”

  • o7___o7@awful.systems
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    2 days ago

    All my homies hate Helena Blavatsky. Her grifty bullshit has caused so much human misery.

    This Rohrer character is a worthy successor.

  • luciole@beehaw.org
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    2 days ago

    Oh no. I mainly knew Jason Rohrer for his video games. For a few minutes I hoped this was some elaborate prank, but apparently he drank the Kool-Aid. He wrote that Project December’s chatbot was arguably the first machine with a soul. I preferred the playful minimalist existentialism of Passage.

    • 200fifty@awful.systems
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      2 days ago

      ngl his stuff always felt a bit cynical to me, in that it seemed to exist more to say “look, video games can have a deep message!” than it did to just have such a message in the first place. Like it existed more to gesture at the concept of meaningfulness rather than to be meaningful itself.