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Nice work there.
What strikes me about the whole ordeal is how eager people are to consume this type of content, how eager they are to be lied to in just the way the suites them. Also, I'm surprised that we don't see more of this type of content produced. Given the demand, it seems there's a some good money to be made here, especially if you use something like GPT-3 to just generate twitter reports like this.
It shouldn't be that surprising, and for the same reason I'm not overly updating on this post. I'm not going to independently verify this and it conforms to my prior, if I took it too seriously I'd be making the same mistake as the people who fell for the other post, although I do trust trace more than some random. I also wouldn't put it past trace for this to be a double hoax to show how easily people who call out hoxes are hoaxed.
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I recently got a youtube ad for an AI social media post generator. I googled it and I guess there’s more, but here’s the first result:
https://postello.ai/
Keep in mind that the “business” they’re advertising for also includes “influencer”.
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I'm not too shocked. It's just confirmation bias. If you have a belief, you'll search out information that confirms it in order to feel justified.
If I hate a film, I'll look for reviews that also rated it poorly. I already know what I believe, what joy do I get from reading stuff that disagrees with me?
I think there's a difference: I'm not very cautious about film reviews. If I don't like a film, I'll happily get on the bandwagon of those bashing it.
But when I'm evaluating ideas about how the world works, then I'm going to use a much higher standard. It's more uncomfortable, both because the issues are more complicated and more important, but it seems the struggle is worth it.
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