I asked chatgpt and it told me:
Wrong network configuration
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I asked chatgpt and it told me:
Wrong network configuration
Just because the final output comes from AI doesn't always mean a human didn't put real effort into writing it. There's a big difference between asking an LLM to write something from scratch, telling it exactly what to say, or just having it edit and polish what you already wrote.
A ton of my replies here - including this one - are technically "AI output," but all the AI really did was take what I wrote, clean it up, and turn it into coherent text that's easier for the reader to follow.
spoiler
Original text: Just because the final output is by AI doesn't always mean human didn't put effort into writing it. There's a difference between asking LLM to write something, telling LLM what to write or asking it to edit something you wrote.
A large number of my replies here, including this one, are technically "AI output" but all the AI did was go through what I wrote and try and turn it into coherent text that the is easy for the recipient to consume.
I don't think the LLM made your response better in a meaningful way. Sure, it cleaned up the grammar a little bit, but the rephrasing in a few places is not necessary.
Trust yourself to communicate without help from external software.
making one dependent on external service is the very point of llm from the point of view of investors. Imagine how much money they will make if everyone just couldnt live without llm in every aspect of their life.
I only did it here to illustrate a point. Typically I only use it on longer posts. I'm not a native english speaker and I often struggle to express my thoughts clearly and I find it immensely useful to run it through AI and see the corrections it made.
Seriously, your text was good enough for a comment, and for everything else just put in some effort? It's really not that hard, and using ai actively harms people.
I read your original just fine.
Absolutely rude. If you're using AI to make a point for you, you've already admitted you don't know enough about what you're talking about to be having a opinion in the first place, let alone be worth discussing an issue with.
I’ve had these interactions with the head of my IT department. I asked to procure a license for jfrog artifactory. He literally copy/pasted a ChatGPT response to me that began like this:
Here’s a breakdown of how JFrog Artifactory compares to using GitHub, NPM, or other language-specific package mangers (like Pypi)…
…
1. Purpose and Functionality
…
2. Workflow & Developer Experience
…
3. Security and Compliance
…
✅ When to use JFrog
…
It came with a bunch of theoretical risks that are completely resolved by the simple ability of just not being a complete fucking moron.
It was really frustrating that I tried to talk with my IT leader, and instead found a proxy for ChatGPT.
After that, he created a group chat with him, I, and my colleagues in security. He proceeded to paste ChatGPT output outlining bullshit risks and theories, with the implicit expectation that I rhetorically address each of them via my own response. I’d explain things like,
“[well if you read the fucking request yourself, you’d know that] we aren’t planning to use the software that way, so the concern isn’t relevant. Even if we were though, those problems are easily addressable via …”
In some cases, I even had to explain that the problems he’s raising are already problems faced in the current ecosystem. Completely unrelated to the software I’m talking about… ChatGPT just straight up implying that an architectural problem is a software risk.
I’d reply, and I swear to god he’d just give ChatGPT my text and paste the reply from ChatGPT back to me.
I lost a lot of respect for him. Why the fuck would you do that?
I'm fast coming to the conclusion that AI can indeed replace jobs. The thing is that the only job it can actually replace is that of a lazy middle manager. AI is great at responding to email if A:) you don't know what your talking about or B:) you don't respect the other person enough to waste the time formulating an actual response. AI in my experience is only really good at faking that there's someone on the other end. The fact that there's an entire management class it can convenienceingly impersonate is a pretty searing indictment as far as I'm concerned.
My company hired a consulting firm to help with a transition period. The consulting firm sent my boss an email that outlined the plans for what we should do and how they are going to help. Without directly giving it away, the email was clearly AI output, and my boss instantly terminated their contract. We aren't exactly anti-AI, but to the point of the post, it's just so rude... and my boss is pretty fuckin cool.
Especially rude if you want to charge money for it. If your boss wanted an AI answer, they would have asked an AI. You don't need an expensive consulting company for that.
Totally agree. When someone sends me some AI slop about a topic I have knowledge about -- which I've had this happen to me recently during a debug session -- and asks me to read it, I think to myself "this person does not respect me, otherwise they wouldn't be telling me to read stuff that may or may not be accurate that they themselves never read." It's like a new, worse version of "let me google that for you" but without the sarcasm, and without the results actually being helpful.
Whenever someone at work says "ChatGPT says this" or "Claude says this" or "I asked Gemini and..." whatever they say after that point is just static and I never take them seriously as a person again.
As a source it's rude. As a piece of unreliable help of the kind "we both don't know the syntax of that programming language, let's ask Ollama how to draw such and such a shape in it" it's kinda fine.
red flag
I never take them seriously as a person again
i dunno dude. i used to be a real piece of shit.

I appreciate the honesty when they say it's an AI response and not genuine knowledge.
When I tell someone "an LLM told me that..." It's usually followed by "Let's see if there's any truth to it." An AI response should always be treated as a suggestion, not an answer.
Hell, Google's AI still doesn't know which day the F1 GP is on this week. It was wrong by a whole week a while back. Now it's only off by a day.
An AI response should always be treated as a suggestion, not an answer
Exactly. An AI response can be a great way to get started on a topic you know little about, but it's never a definitive answer. You have to verify whether it's actually true. Whether it works. Never trust it blindly.
I feel like a big barrier is people anthropomorphizing the AI. It's not "ChatGPT generated this" it's "ChatGPT said this". I don't necessarily blame people for it, machine that speaks to you short circuits something in people's brains and it's not like we've got better language to talk about it. It's just that... people treat it as an opinion, not as software output. And so long as that's how people handle it, I just don't know if a "healthy" use of the technology is possible.
hi friends i hope you're well.
i worked a laborious job and experienced a phenomenon i refer to as "parasitic thought:" it is where someone will provide to you all of the information that a person would require to reach the correct conclusion, and then stare at you. they want you to crunch the info for them.
i feel like one of those parasites in my agent interactions. i know i COULD think, but you can do it too, lil buddy. go on. do it for me.
i don't know about "reasonable" or "ethical" or "polite," but in my experience: if someone just regurgitates some clank clank slop slop, it reads as hostile. "i can't be bothered to communicate with you, here, read this wall of gpt-vomit"
my instinct is to copy and paste, "LLM agent of my choice, what's this person trying to say to me?" and then skim the ai synthesized summary of the ai composed body text generated from some idiot's faint echoes of thought.
in the words of your highschool biology teacher, the human is the powerhouse of the agentic loop. in my unimportant opinion, responsible use of genai agents means that the output should be indistinguishable, if not better, than something you wrote by hand.
there are privacy implications. linguistic assessment can be used to identify you. from a privacy perspective, the internet would be preferable if everyone fed their carefully formed thoughts to an LLM and said "make this look like chatgpt 3 wrote it."
Something that some coworkers have started doing that is even more rude in my opinion, as a new social etiquette, is AI summarizing my own writing in response to me, or just outright copypasting my question to gpt and then pasting it back to me
Not even "I asked chatgpt and it said", they just dump it in the chat @ me
Sometimes I'll write up a 2~3 paragraph thought on something.
And then I'll get a ping 15min later and go take a look at what someone responded with annnd... it starts with "Here's a quick summary of what (pixxelkick) said! "
I find this horribly rude tbh, because:
I have had to very gently respond each time a person does this at work and state that I am perfectly able to AI summarize myself well on my own, and while I appreciate their attempt its... just coming across as wasting everyones time.
Oof, I don't even get what they are trying to accomplish there. Maybe they had some kind of social training that told them "Summarize and reply what you understood first to show that you listened and avoid miscommunication, then add your response." and their brain short circuited and started to think a ChatGPT summarization is the same.
I'd get pretty hostile at work if someone started to do that..
I'd leave the appreciate the attempt out. You don't.
More importantly, would enquire if they use corporate or free AI. Second one is used for training and has no or low protection of (perhaps sensitive) corporate info/data.
I think at some point it will come out that the corporate subscription is no different and the LLM companies have been scraping everything for training data.
I hate people so fucking much
This is sad, really. People are fed the lie that AI is objective, and apparently they think that they will get the objective summary of what you said if they run it through a chatbot.
And the more people interact with chatbots, the harder they find it to interact outside of the chatbots. So they might feel even more uncomfortable with asking you to summarize yourself. So they go back to the chatbot. It's a self-perpetuating cycle.
Exactly. To your point, AI output is probabilistically the average opinion of everyone on the internet so it shares the common biases of the general public. Even with a bit of RLHF to "balance out" the models. Also it probably doesn't help to anthropomorphise them. They don't have opinions, they just autocomplete based on prior input
It seems pretty clear after a few years of people getting AI psychosis that LLMs are an addictive psychological hazard
I already think that it's insulting when people accomplish/do/implement/... something and want to inform the others and do that by generating a 1-2 pages long wall of text via LLM that is then copy-pasted into an email......
Like... Can't you just write down the 5 or 10 most important points? Are we not worth the time to do so? Do we have to find the most relevant information ourselves in that text???
You’re supposed to feed it into your own prompt to summarize it duh. /s
Soon we will live in a world where my AI talks to your ai 😅
I sometimes use LLMs to help me with brevity or clarity. But the input is my own words and the output is almost always edited so that I sound like me because sometimes, while the output is serviceable, it's just... bad and uninspired.
Plus it's like "this doesn't sound professional". Well, fuck you, it sounds how I want to sound.
You should learn how to write better instead of relying on slop.
The best way to learn to write is to write and have someone critique you. That someone can be an AI it doesn't change anything about the process, as long as the initial input is your own best effort and the final result is your own edit based on the feedback you received.
Who said I rely on it? I accept suggestions when they are good, even if the source of the suggestions is a slop generator. I accept what it is right about and reject what is wrong. And why not? It costs nothing.
And, at 52, I write the way I write. I enjoy the process, I enjoy playing with language. I enjoy the juxtaposition of literary flourishes with a crude fuck you thrown in as punctuation and counterpoint to what might otherwise seem inaccessible or deliberately obtuse.
But do you know what I've found? I can be a little overly self-indulgent. For example, you didn't want all this, you just wanted to throw your glib little "lrn2write" and garner a few upvotes from the vehement AI haters and give yourself a self-righteous pat on the back.
Sometimes I need another perspective to suggest restraint. As you can see, this, like 98% of my writing, is mine alone, else I'd've taken what would undoubtedly be good advice and held back on the more acerbic bits, and made sure I wasn't posting some knee-jerk defensive self-indulgent 100% man-made slop.
But here we are.
It costs nothing.
Except for an opportunity to practice getting better at the thing you recognize is an issue.
And, at 52, I write the way I write.
Although I guess you've already given up on the getting better part.
what if it was my boss who said that during a technical argument? :/
True story
Believe it or not, blocked.
straight to unemployment line
It's more about post/message size for me. If ya post a few sentences that clearly and concisely communicate a point, I don't really care if they're crafted or generated. If ya post a wall of text, I wanna know ya put the kind of effort in that made its length necessary if I'm gonna put in the effort to read it.
Especially ChatGPT is awful for that. You ask it something and it always spews a whole page of content.
At work we use Claude, which does produce better output and also calls out your bullshit. There it's actually helping quite a bit (software development), but of course you have to understand what you are changing and clean things up.
@lemmydividebyzero This happened to me at work. They are really pushing Copilot on us.
To drive up fake usage numbers for justifying the bubble they created to shareholders.
The new manager of my building did it, and it was all unactionable garbage. My direct manager showed me, and he and the other managers used AI to generate the response to it.