You're totally correct! People really start talking like ChatGPT. Here's an explanation why...
That is an excellent point, you're making. I would like to add that ...
A year after Elon bought Twitter there was a study done that found out roughly half of all Twitter users are fake.
Most reddit users are fake now.
The spam from AI bots are draining more electricity than cities, it is quickly becoming the majority of global power usage.
These datacenters need to be burned down.
With the owners inside, preferably.
I probably would be among the last to notice, as I have never used this.
I understand, and there is no need to feel out of place. It is perfectly fine to engage at your own pace. Should you choose to explore this further, I am here to provide any assistance you may need with utmost support and encouragement.
Comment of the day 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I haven't noticed this yet fortunately. Anyone?
Not really. There's a lot of Eastern Europe where the kids speak English they learned from YouTube, so they all have American accents and call people "bro." Speach patterns like ChatGPT would be too cheery to be taken seriously by anyone.
Like, in this world right now, are there people that respond to a question with a chirpy, "Certainly! Let's dive in to that!"
Doubt.
Like, in this world right now, are there people that respond to a question with
Certainly! Let's dive into that:
As the ChatGPT platform has grown in userbase over the years, it can be assumed that younger foreign users would pick up on the language patterns — specially if they are communicating with the platform on a daily basis.
Much like the already-existing effect of children picking up on Youtuber's mannerisms and verbal styles over time, this brings up Nature vs Nurture1 methods of learning.
Would you like to explore more about how this comment was generated by a human with no LLM help, or tricks to make your own written text sound like you're fake?
No thanks, I just threw up in my mouth.
Oh no! 😨 I'm sorry to hear that!
Would you like to talk about your symptoms or hear about our lab-grown brain implants that mostly override physical symptoms by showing you ads relevant to what your neighbor browses past 8PM?
Alright, I’ll be here if you need any help!
If you truly didn't use LLM, kudos to you. You managed to switch my brain off in the first paragraph like only slop does. I had to force myself to read it
Thank you! Nothin AI about it, just good ol' thumb-smashing on a phone hahaha
I have a friend who has worked in HR that will sometimes slip into that tone, but that's unrelated to ChatGPT
Just the occasional garbage comment or message where someone has clearly just copied and pasted a direct LLM output.
I do feel like lately I have people more bluntly asking me for stuff though and getting frustrated respectfully respecifying what they want but that also started before covid. People just want answers they think should be readily available for a while now.
It's a Vice article so it's all bullshit anyhow.
"You can totally trust things that sound like they're AI generated, that's just how people talk now! Trust us!"
Was this funded by ChatGPT?
Got it, we need to rename Gen Alpha to Gen NPC.
GeNPC
fr fr thats no cap bussin
... or something like that
What was that sonny? Yer speakin inteh m'bad ear.
/* holds up video of skibidi toilet */
/* does the fortnite floss dance */
There's so very much in that paper that doesn't seem to suggest what they are saying it does. It suggests people are directly using those tools to create scripts for academic videos instead of their fundamental speech changing. They state that they manually reviewed for "reading vs spontaneous" and found about 30 percent were directly reading a script, but extrapolating the non "reading" samples to not have used AI copy edited outlines in this context is a leap. It would make more sense that they did. These lecture videos were not examples of natural language use in any sense.
Our study is focused on academic communication, yet we anticipate that similar patterns may extend to other communicative contexts.
Seems particularly unfounded (though it really has enough hedges to make it a non statement "similar" "may" with no reference to what context they're thinking of). It's also a preprint that gets most of its models from preprints.
Then the vice article takes every weakness of the paper and actually amplifies them to a really profound degree. We've got researchers trying to push an AI is transformative narrative and a journalist trying to push an AI makes you stupid narrative right off a cliff into "popsci journalists reporting on preprints make stupid claims" pit.
Literally don't talk to enough people to notice. 🤷🏿♀️
AI shills are coming for you... Dont you want a friend who lives in data center?!
I think i've seen more people use "-" in emails and what have you more within the past year than ever before and it makes me wonder "did they use chatgpt to write this?"
or I've had project managers on jobs I'm consulting for use "final thoughts:" in docs/emails and I know for a fact they didn't write it. When you use AI pretty much daily for your job like I do you can spot people using it from a mile away. Blog posts, game/movie/book reviews, proposals, emails, etc everyone is using it. Hell you can spot it here on Lemmy and on Reddit very easily. it's harder to find actual real person written content these days then AI content.
and if they use EM Dashes? 100% it's AI.
cries in using emdashes since years before LLMs existed
Edit: misspoke, AI doesn't exist
and if they use EM Dashes? 100% it's AI.
Sorry to disappoint you, but I regularly use em dashes. (It's ALT+0151 on PC.)
Remember that the models do model on the writings of actual people. They're just regurgitating it really badly.
Applications such as Exchange/Outlook turn a double dash to an em dash when you type it. I've used them for a couple decades.
Oh, that's kinda useful to know. Thanks.
Libre office always extends my - - - little dashes - - -
I used dashes for decades. I've removed all of them all since ChatGPT became popular. It doesnt help that I think ChatGPT overuses them.
Joke's on them, I already talked like that 😆
It's just a case of art imitating life imitating art imitating life imitating art imitating life. What's so hard to understand about that?
I was admittedly pulled in by the clickbait title but then saw that it's a Vice article and realized that reading this crap would be pointless as it will all be absolute bullshit.
The words they studied were, delve, realm, meticulous and adept.
Which sucks, because those were words I used before ChatGPT came along.
I don’t touch the AIs so I don’t know what that means.
It’s really sad cause I’m big into tech and gadgets but AI is just garbage.
Fuck AI
"We did it, Patrick! We made a technological breakthrough!"
A place for all those who loathe AI to discuss things, post articles, and ridicule the AI hype. Proud supporter of working people. And proud booer of SXSW 2024.