• ubermeisters@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Well I hope they're going to do better at detecting AI content than anyone ever has before because nobody's done it well at all so far.

    There's an inherent problem here that AI produces results similar to what it's trained on and it was not trained on robotic input it was trained on natural human language online.

    • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Well it will be, because it's detecting AI-generated content indirectly. What it's directly detecting are bot posters, which are much easier to spot.

      "AI detectors" have the uphill job of having to figure out whether something is generated by looking only at what was generated. Fakespot and tools like it get to use the metadata, which has many telltales that bots aren't even trying to hide.

      • ubermeisters@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        I think for me personally they can fuck right off with this. It's unwarranted and invasive. Maybe some fat asses need to get off the couch and stop ordering so much shit online. ( any perceived negativity here is my disappointment in Mozilla not negativity directed at you)

    • Draghetta@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      IDK chief. It seems like one of those things that are hard to do in theory as you said, but relatively easy in practice.

      I mean just about any human who has played a bit with ChatGPT nowadays is able to identify ChatGPT generated paragraphs within a few words. I don’t suppose it would be much harder for a machine.

      • ubermeisters@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Therein lies the issue though. If its not hard to detect, then right after that, its hard to detect again, because the previous fix has been trained out/around. The harder we work to develop detection, the harder we work to ensure detection avoidance is advanced in parallel.