Ok so I can kind of tune into what you’re saying here, but I also feel kind of uneasy about it. I guess I’d be curious what you make of the following potential arguments:
Ingredients are important because we can’t directly discern what’s in food. But with writing we can see exactly what’s there and judge that directly without needing to judge the process. (This perspective would endorse reviews being posted warning people not to read low-quality stuff.)
Requiring disclosure is an inappropriate form of thought policing—people should have the right to use whatever cognitive processes and augmentation methods they like, and take responsibility for the words they then share. If this produces LLM garbage it’s not on them to label that up front, but this should have the natural consequence that people stop listening to them.
Ok so I can kind of tune into what you’re saying here, but I also feel kind of uneasy about it. I guess I’d be curious what you make of the following potential arguments:
Ingredients are important because we can’t directly discern what’s in food. But with writing we can see exactly what’s there and judge that directly without needing to judge the process. (This perspective would endorse reviews being posted warning people not to read low-quality stuff.)
Requiring disclosure is an inappropriate form of thought policing—people should have the right to use whatever cognitive processes and augmentation methods they like, and take responsibility for the words they then share. If this produces LLM garbage it’s not on them to label that up front, but this should have the natural consequence that people stop listening to them.
Hi Nick. This comment is empty.