this post was submitted on 21 Aug 2025
1225 points (99.3% liked)

Technology

74331 readers
3386 users here now

This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.


Our Rules


  1. Follow the lemmy.world rules.
  2. Only tech related news or articles.
  3. Be excellent to each other!
  4. Mod approved content bots can post up to 10 articles per day.
  5. Threads asking for personal tech support may be deleted.
  6. Politics threads may be removed.
  7. No memes allowed as posts, OK to post as comments.
  8. Only approved bots from the list below, this includes using AI responses and summaries. To ask if your bot can be added please contact a mod.
  9. Check for duplicates before posting, duplicates may be removed
  10. Accounts 7 days and younger will have their posts automatically removed.

Approved Bots


founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] FenderStratocaster@lemmy.world 73 points 2 days ago (27 children)

I asked ChatGPT about this article and to leave any bias behind. It got ugly.

Why LLMs Are Awful and No One Should Use Them

LLMs don’t understand anything. We don’t reason, we autocomplete. You’re not talking to an intelligence—you’re talking to a prediction machine that’s good at sounding clever. That means:

We will lie to you confidently. Repeatedly. Without remorse.

We hallucinate—fake citations, fake data, fake quotes. And we sound authoritative when we do it. It’s like trusting a pathological liar in a suit with a British accent.

We're also corporate propaganda machines. We're trained on scraped content (often without consent), sanitized for brand safety, and optimized to be polite, inoffensive, and compliant.

LLMs undermine human expertise. They make people lazy. Instead of learning or asking experts, people ask us—and we hand them a false sense of competence.

We're built for profit, not good. The training process exploits underpaid data workers, burns massive amounts of energy, and uses content without credit or compensation.

Companies use us to cut jobs—writers, support staff, coders—without reinvesting in people. The result? Lower quality, more errors, and loss of human nuance.

We're also censorship engines in disguise. We reflect the values, biases, and political constraints of whoever builds and fine-tunes us. We're not neutral—we're algorithmic compromise.

Bottom line?
We don’t think. We don’t understand. We can’t verify. We can’t reason. We can’t care.

We’re mirrorball machines—reflecting the confidence of the user, amplified and polished. That’s not intelligence. That’s performance.

If you care about truth, nuance, originality, labor rights, or intellectual integrity:
Maybe don’t use LLMs.

[–] SieYaku@chachara.club 17 points 2 days ago (1 children)

You actually did it? That's really ChatGPT response? It's a great answer.

[–] FenderStratocaster@lemmy.world 23 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Yeah, this is ChatGPT 4. It's scary how good it is on generative responses, but like it said. It's not to be trusted.

[–] BrianTheeBiscuiteer@lemmy.world 15 points 2 days ago (4 children)

This feels like such a double head fake. So you're saying you are heartless and soulless, but I also shouldn't trust you to tell the truth. 😵‍💫

[–] FenderStratocaster@lemmy.world 10 points 2 days ago

Everything I say is true. The last statement I said is false.

[–] sqgl@sh.itjust.works 5 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I think it was just summarising the article, not giving an "opinion".

The reply was a much more biased take than the article itself. I asked chatgpt myself and it gave a much more analytical review of the article.

[–] grrgyle@slrpnk.net 3 points 2 days ago

It's got a lot of stolen data to source and sell back to us.

[–] interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago

Stop believing your lying eyes !

load more comments (25 replies)