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There are a lot of situations where a 95% chance at a correct answer and a 5% chance of a horribly wrong one isn't acceptable, but last I checked, we haven't thrown out much of mainstream reporting or academia, despite my many grievances with them. LLMs may not (or may!) have an acceptable middleman to cut out and/or scapegoat for legal liability. Even for matters of law, asking a chatbot to then check if it makes sense to even try to find a Real Expert or ELI5ing a twit is a viable strategy, and one not readily served by Google Search or Reddit unless you like being annoying.
That may not have a business case, but that's a different question.
And yet I would argue that this is why LLMs have (despite the hype) not been able to find a niche outside decent translation software, bad fiction, and worse customer service.
Contra the typical SV rationalist narrative, blue-chip engineering firms and the national security apparatus are not "sleeping on LLMs" so much as LLM are just not up to the task.
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