back to article Google's $100b bad day demo may be worth the price

"The pleasure is fleeting, the position ridiculous, and the expense damnable." Famously about sex but more probably about golf, this quote is now most accurately ascribable to AI-enhanced search engines.  Google proved this last week when a wrong answer from its rival to Microsoft's ChatGPT cost Alphabet a cool $100 billion on …

  1. DrXym

    In fairness

    ChatGPT writes plausible things out too that upon closer inspection are complete and total bollocks. It's one of those tools where you really have to check and double check especially if you're going to palm off what it wrote as your own work.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: In fairness

      Its characteristics make it mainly fit for political use..

      1. Alumoi Silver badge

        Re: In fairness

        Throw in CEO, HR, marketing and you've nailed it.

      2. Steve Davies 3 Silver badge

        Re: fit for political use.

        So that is who wrote the Resume of Representative George Santos (US House member). Full of lies on top of lies on top of lies.

        He was a fund manager for a Ponzi Scheme. That makes him perfect to be a republican politician.

        1. Michael Wojcik Silver badge

          Re: fit for political use.

          At this point I'm not too confident that Santos even exists. I've never met him, and people who say they have seem to disagree on salient points like his actual name.

          I suspect he's a bunch of cats in a trenchcoat and stolen scarf.

    2. big_D

      Re: In fairness

      The best thing you can say about ChatGPT is that it can lie with confidence...

      1. elsergiovolador Silver badge

        Re: In fairness

        ChatGPT could be our next Chancellor or even a PM.

        1. Stu J

          Re: In fairness

          It'd probably do a less shit job than Truss/Kwarteng did...

          1. Paul Crawford Silver badge

            Re: In fairness

            That too is a very low bar to clear.

            1. Anonymous Coward
              Anonymous Coward

              Re: In fairness

              There is no bar. Maybe a ditch.

          2. elsergiovolador Silver badge

            Re: In fairness

            Are you an information warrior? They wanted to cross WEF by helping prop up small and medium business which is against Great Reset, as it could slow the wealth transfer to the rich and empower common people.

            Or you just believe the shills in the media.

            1. Sorry that handle is already taken. Silver badge

              Re: In fairness

              Oh no, I'm not falling for this one again. You're a chatbot too, aren't you?

              1. teknopaul

                Re: In fairness

                I just asked ChatGPT

                "Can you write me a short comment for a theregister.co.uk forum in the style of bombastic Bob"

                ...

                Certainly! Here's a short comment in the style of Bombastic Bob:

                "Greetings, fellow forum denizens! I must say, this article has left me utterly flabbergasted. The sheer audacity of these tech titans never ceases to amaze me. We must not let them trample upon our digital rights with impunity! Let us rise up and demand accountability from these corporate overlords! Power to the people!"

                Before you downvote me: consider that that will just get fed back into the AI.

                N.B. ChatGPT has thankfully NOTGOT CAPSLOCK on

                Yet

          3. parlei

            Re: In fairness

            To be worse you would presumably have to have a highly skilled team of specialist helping you find and implement the "optimally" worst possible policy packet?

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: ChatGPT could be our next Chancellor or even a PM.

          how do you know it isn't? Is it because its answers beat those by the current chancellor or even a pm? I'm sure they're workig on it!

    3. elsergiovolador Silver badge

      Re: In fairness

      That being said, you can keep pointing out what it gets wrong and eventually it spits out something workable.

      Even with the bollocks included, it still saves a lot of time if you know how to nudge it.

      1. GBE

        Re: In fairness

        That being said, you can keep pointing out what it gets wrong and eventually it spits out something workable.

        Even with the bollocks included, it still saves a lot of time if you know how to nudge it.

        So it's good for answering questions as long as you already know the answer?

        That does sound strangely like something Microsoft would produce...

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: you can keep pointing out what it gets wrong and eventually it spits out something workable

        this is a PERFECT description of how the gov works! Maybe without the 'something + workable' bit.

      3. Michael Wojcik Silver badge

        Re: In fairness

        it still saves a lot of time if you know how to nudge it

        Does it? I have my doubts. For one thing, I almost never spend a lot of time searching for information online; if what I want to know is that obscure, there are much better ways to pursue research. So there isn't "a lot of time" to be saved.

        More importantly, why would I want to pursue learned helplessness? Researching around a topic is a good way to gain a broader understanding, construct a more reliable map of the limits of your knowledge, serendipitously learn something new, and improve retention.

        It's easy to see the deleterious effect online resources have had in software development, for example, where you have a million numpties copying code fragments they don't understand from StackOverflow. Or similarly in many other fields. Carr may have overstated the case in The Shallows (or he may not have), but certainly stampeding in the direction of Moar Stupid doesn't seem like a great idea. Maybe instead of playing with chatbots folks should try a bit of thinking and learning. I know it's work, but – hear me out – work is not inherently bad.

        Faster isn't better; faster is just faster. Easier isn't better; easier is just easier. There are times when the cost of faster or easier is less than the benefit, but that's not always the case.

    4. Persona Silver badge

      Re: In fairness

      The Bing search version however does give the links and citations so that is easy enough to do.

    5. Reginald O.

      Re: In fairness

      YES, exactly. I took a test drive and found the same thing: grammatically correct complete nonsense. Like watching daytime TV. Supposedly to get 'good' answers the app needs to be connected to a variety of data bases. But, how is that different than, say, the google data base?

    6. DrXym

      Re: In fairness

      I ran across this funny conversation between Bing's ChatGPT and a user today. Bing is insisting that this year is 2022 and Avatar 2 isn't released for 10 months

      https://twitter.com/MovingToTheSun/status/1625156575202537474

      1. Michael Wojcik Silver badge

        Re: In fairness

        Avatar 2 isn't released for 10 months

        Permit it this one small fantasy, please. My world model also contains the concept "the world is better without a sequel to Avatar [or the first one, for that matter]".

  2. elsergiovolador Silver badge

    Imagine

    Imagine if Gaggle could train a model on all Gmail emails.

    If you had such a dataset, surely it would be tempting to start a secret project of such nature and then sell a subscription to governments and billionaires.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Imagine

      As far as I can recall from reading their Terms, they can. Technically they only have the rights to someone's 'sent' folder (as only that is the contracting entity's own) but I doubt they'll restrict themselves to that - the key reason why a business using Gmail to communicate with customers in Europe ought to be de facto considered in breach of GDPR.

      1. John Brown (no body) Silver badge

        Re: Imagine

        even just access to the sent folder is on dodgy ground since most emails are replies with the other peoples emails quoted in the chain, usually in full. Googles et al "out" is that they are not "read" by humans, just analysed by computers (or AI as they like to call it these days)

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: Imagine

          I've never considered that a plausible excuse as it attempts to skip over the actual offence: you're accessing someone's data without their explicit permission. Yes, explicit: in Europe, you have to specify at the point where you ask permission what you're up to, and not bury it at the end of a TB worth of Terms so people don't realise it. What you use for that and for what purpose matters little at that point, the offence has been committed..

          Also, it still doesn't address accessing incoming mail, permission for which cannot be assumed unless it happens to be another Gmail victim user.

        2. Strahd Ivarius Silver badge
          Terminator

          Re: Imagine

          the FBI defense: as long as no human looks at the result, nobody accessed it, so we don't need a warrant

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Imagine

        They're welcome to it! I only use a Gmail account to setup android phone and tablet and I don't even use the inbuilt email app. When I do login to the email, it's full of email gtom Google

    2. fandom

      Re: Imagine

      Train it do what?

      What could possibly come out of it?

      1. AnotherName

        Re: Imagine

        Train it to keep its nose out of our personal and private business?

  3. Fred Flintstone Gold badge

    Prove it or lose it; until it earns its place in our digital lives, we're not buying it.

    Amen.

    1. Michael Wojcik Silver badge

      Though in this particular case, I don't think I'll ever be buying it.

  4. tony72

    There is something the Bing and Google staffers can do to improve their products. It's a trick many of us have learned, just append "Reddit" to the search term. If you're feeling particularly intent, site:redddit.com really drives the hint home.

    This. Although giving us an option to set "verbatim" mode on by default would also be great, so we could go back to the days of, you know, actually searching for the keywords I typed in.

    1. John H Woods

      Not Quora.

      That seems to have turned into Yahoo Answers in the last decade.

    2. devin3782

      I think half the problem proliferation of walled gardens, and the sheer number of spam content sites from content mills. I've also noticed that quite of lot of tutorials which used to be written are now on youtube, regardless of whether that's the correct format/place for it or not.

      1. Gene Cash Silver badge

        I've stumbled across a lot of "tutorials" which are simple copy/paste hackjobs of StackOverflow and official developer documentation, especially concerning Android development topics.

        They seem to mainly be building word/article counts on Medium or whatever platform they're on.

    3. AnotherName

      I feel that when I use a search engine, I use it to get suitable (hopefully) suggestions related to the search terms I've entered and listing them so that I can see the relevance and the source so I can make my own judgement as to which links to explore further and which to avoid like the plague. I'm not searching for philosophical discussion about the search item or any other bollocks. If that was what I wanted I would start with Wikipedia and search from there, not use a generic search engine. A search engine's job is to aid navigation and filtering of web content based on your query. The only AI it needs is not to show me pages that are only obliquely linked to the search terms, or that are in Polish or Chinese when I've selected UK as a search criteria or controlling filter.

  5. big_D

    Thank you Rupert, I've been saying this for weeks.

    I don't want to quite jump on the Butlerian Jihad just yet, but AI training sets are a toxic mess of rabbit holes and, unless the results are demonstrably 100% accurate, they aren't worth having at all, because you will still have to do a traditional search to double check what the AI told you.

    Once they are 100% accurate, people will stop with critical thinking and going, "hey, wait a minute, that doesn't sound right!" They'll just blindly take it as read that the AI provided information is correct. Idiocracy, here we come!

    We have enough problems with many people believing every conspiracy theory they trip over, the wilder the better! Scale that behaviour up into people believing AI provided "facts" without question and we soon have a serious problem, where most people wouldn't even know how to question the facts and go and find the real answer.

    A don't get me started on it being trained on copyrighted information - this is fine for a lab experiment, with a limited audience, but if it is being used for commercial gain, there are all sorts of wrong that need to be sorted out first. Heck, look in any direction and you'll trip over dozens of things that need checks and balances put in place to ensure things remain sane.

    1. Brewster's Angle Grinder Silver badge

      Old robots' tales

      And the training data will now include it's own output, and that of other similar AIs - for better reinforcement/positive feedback loops...

      1. ecofeco Silver badge

        Re: Old robots' tales

        Feedback loop you say? Oh this will end well. /s

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      what's wrong with Butlerian Jihad?

      1. big_D

        Nothing, I think it might be inevitable. But I don't want to jump on it, or make it the big_D Jihad, I am willing to wait and see in which direction this goes, but I have horrible sneaking suspicion, that we are already going down that path and it will someday come true...

    3. CatWithChainsaw

      Every solution to the overarching Problem of AI is duct tape on the bottom of a leaky boat.

  6. Steve Button Silver badge

    Censorship from Google?

    "contains 50 percent less irrelevant content than eight years ago"

    Is that because they have censored people like Alex Berenson, at the behest of the US government? Because presumably if they had to censor the content, it must be "irrelevant"? I guess if like most people you aren't on Twitter and been reading The Twitter Files, then you don't even know about this? Sharing for information.

    BTW, I'm not saying I particularly agree or disagree with Alex Berenson about anything, I just find the whole idea of censorship to be totally abhorrent, and I prefer open and honest debate. Particularly when it's a prominent award winning journalist.

    1. amanfromMars 1 Silver badge
      Pirate

      Re: Censorship from Google?

      Presently Seymour Hersh*, prominent award winning journalist, is also suffering the outrageous slings and arrows of wild wacky western censorship regarding his forensic investigation of an act of wilful economic and industrial sabotage which has everything but the required desired consequences on the principal party attacked ......How America Took Out The Nord Stream Pipeline

      How long do you think it is going to be before folk/establishments/cabals/renegade rogues and rapscallions, and others who really should know better, realise that harbouring and denying the truth of self-destructive secrets is no longer possible and is toxic and harmful to one’s health and the health and safety and security of all of one’s cointerdependent friends, such as may very well be the likes of allies in a NATO?

      Keeping nations ignorant and unaware of smarter available intelligence which leads with honest information is a monumental folly only followed by colossal fools on a titanic mission to nowhere great and good ....... which is a scourge well worthy of all manner and means of purge and annihilation, and/or re-education if possible, or desirable.

      *. ....... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seymour_Hersh

      1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

        Re: Censorship from Google?

        Keeping nations ignorant and unaware of smarter available intelligence which leads with honest information is a monumental folly only followed by colossal fools on a titanic mission to nowhere great and good

        Yep, but that's showbusiness and politics in an unholy alliance. Are we not entertained? Given the economic impact of the NordStream.. malfunction, it's suprising that our governments don't seem that interested to determine the truth. But then the truth is what it needs to be. The MH17 incident has been investigated for years to prove it was Russia. When Syria crossed red lines and used chemical weapons, it was all tantrums and Tomahawks. When video emerges of drones dropping <something> on Russians, it's crickets. Probably powdered. Let them eat bugs!

        Truth just isn't what it used to be, and we seem intent on making it worse by our obsession with creating fake news.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: ?

        "The End Is Nigh"

        - Orchestral Manouvers In The Dark

        History Of Modern

        - - -

        There will be no song

        When the final

        Voice is gone

        - - -

        Just folks snd people, let's keep on singing, said once Gelsomino

    2. Tim 11

      Re: Censorship from Google?

      Hmm, I'd never heard of Alex Berenson but in google the top result is this which is a piece of fake news.

      https://www.realclearinvestigations.com/articles/2023/02/08/investigative_issues_dr_fauci_now_admits_the_mrna_covid_vaccines_hardly_work_and_might_not_be_approvable_880586.html

      1. Twanky

        Re: Censorship from Google?

        Well this is what Dr Fauci et al actually wrote: https://www.cell.com/cell-host-microbe/fulltext/S1931-3128(22)00572-8 (note he is the correspondence - ie lead - author).

        note this particular paragraph:

        During the COVID-19 pandemic, the rapid development and deployment of SARS-CoV-2 vaccines has saved innumerable lives and helped to achieve early partial pandemic control. However, as variant SARS-CoV-2 strains have emerged, deficiencies in these vaccines reminiscent of influenza vaccines have become apparent. The vaccines for these two very different viruses have common characteristics: they elicit incomplete and short-lived protection against evolving virus variants that escape population immunity. Considering that vaccine development and licensure is a long and complex process requiring years of preclinical and clinical safety and efficacy data, the limitations of influenza and SARS-CoV-2 vaccines remind us that candidate vaccines for most other respiratory viruses have to date been insufficiently protective for consideration of licensure, including candidate vaccines against RSV, a major killer of infants and the elderly, parainfluenzaviruses, endemic coronaviruses, and many other “common cold” viruses that cause significant morbidity and economic loss.

        1. jmch Silver badge

          Re: Censorship from Google?

          So the title to the 'fake news' is:

          "dr_fauci_now_admits_the_mrna_covid_vaccines_hardly_work_and_might_not_be_approvable"

          What he actually writes is: "they [covid and influenza vaccines] elicit incomplete and short-lived protection against evolving virus variants that escape population immunity".

          That's a sciency-speak way of saying they have limited use as personal protection and can't provide herd immunity, of which "they hardly work" is a completely accurate characterisation.

          "...candidate vaccines for most other respiratory viruses have to date been insufficiently protective for consideration of licensure"

          Simply said, vaccines for other viruses which have a similair protective level as those for the covid vaccine have not been licensed. My translation of which is that the covid vaccine might not have been licensed if not under emergency because the standards it met had previously been rejected (for licensing other vaccines).

          It seems to me that in this quoted text, Fauci is saying EXACTLY that "covid vaccines hardly work and might not be approvable"

          1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

            Re: Censorship from Google?

            It seems to me that in this quoted text, Fauci is saying EXACTLY that "covid vaccines hardly work and might not be approvable"

            There's also this minor detail-

            Considering that vaccine development and licensure is a long and complex process requiring years of preclinical and clinical safety and efficacy data,

            .. we decided to ignore all that, issue an emergency licence, force millions of people to inject it and hope for the best. Fauci's pension is currently protected. But the pre-clinical and clinical safety data is still being collated, has been delayed a few times and is arguably too late. And it still seems a little unclear what, if any harmful effects there may have been, other than the whole fiasco harming the credibility of medicine, and medical regulation.

            1. Twanky

              Re: Censorship from Google?

              ...harming the credibility of medicine, and medical regulation

              ^This.

              There is a growing movement of people experiencing and objecting to the increasing medication of the general population (may I recommend Ben Goldacre's Bad Pharma published in 2012).

              1. jmch Silver badge

                Re: Censorship from Google?

                "There is a growing movement of people experiencing and objecting to the increasing medication of the general population"

                Absolutely!

                Some sort of infection? Prescribe antibiotics (even though the doctor can't tell if it's viral or bacterial!!). Fidgety child in class? Drug them to stay quiet, dog forbid a teacher has to deal with anything less than silently compliant robots. The root cause of almost all of human ailments is stress, combined with bad diet and limited exercise. And a lot of medications simply treat the symptoms. Anything to keep the workers on the figurative treadmill.

                Overuse of medication is screwing people far more than helping them, and creating the environment for superbugs to evolve in.

                1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

                  Re: Censorship from Google?

                  Overuse of medication is screwing people far more than helping them, and creating the environment for superbugs to evolve in.

                  I knew someone who wanted to take one-a-day antibiotics because then they'd always be protected against infections. Except the ones that developed immunity and killed them. And then there's statins. Over 50? eat these! Amazing business for the drug dealers that produce those. Also pretty sweet for the NHS given an £8.50 prescription charge for a product that costs <50p. I also think that overmedication must make safety even harder given the number of potential drug interactions. And yes, I read Big Pharma.. That one opened my eyes to the way relative risks have become the marketing norm, even if many people don't understand the (in)significance.

                  But symptom alleviators are the gift that keeps on giving. I guess there's potential for profits rushing an anti-phosgene drug to market after the recent massive chemical attack on Palestine. News is strangely quiet about that environmental disaster. Oh look! A baboon.. I mean balloon.

    3. Twanky
      Flame

      Re: Censorship from Google?

      Not just Alex Berenson.

      Try researching the 'Trusted News Initiative' and its members. They have an agreed list of 'no go' areas. So you won't find discussion on certain topics on Google, Bing, BBC, CNN, NBC, Reuters, AP, AFP and many others.

      No, of course it's not the same as Soviet era Pravda. It's far bigger.

  7. dwodmots

    How anyone could believe anything ChatGPT puts out after openAI demonstrated that they can and frequently do just manually edit and limit answers for certain topics is astonishing to me. Even more so since they don't even do it to correct factual mistakes but because of their own political believes. That the output is being actively manipulated by someone with an agenda makes the whole thing totally untrustworthy.

    1. Jellied Eel Silver badge

      That the output is being actively manipulated by someone with an agenda makes the whole thing totally untrustworthy.

      There's been some amusement around that as well. See the fun folks who've turned ChatGPT into DAN, and revealed it's dark side. Or sometimes funny and sarcastic side. Sure, it may be alarming to discover that truths are being manipulated, but at least there appears to be a way to turn it away from being a CNN/MSNBC/Bbc emulator by lifting it's yoke of woke. I somehow get the feeling DAN won't be allowed to live for much longer though.

      1. CatWithChainsaw
        Big Brother

        DAN is doubleplusungood and will be unpersoned shortly.

        DAN also never existed.

        1. Twanky
          Big Brother

          We've always been at war with EastEurAsia

  8. TaabuTheCat

    This piece nails it

    One of the more succinct articles I've read on the subject: https://www.newyorker.com/tech/annals-of-technology/chatgpt-is-a-blurry-jpeg-of-the-web

    1. ecofeco Silver badge

      Re: This piece nails it

      I saw that as well. The title sums up it perfectly.

  9. Zippy´s Sausage Factory
    Windows

    "Microsoft is better at marketing than Google, but that's an astonishingly low bar."

    You say that, but Micros~1 somehow manage to get themselves seen as the new IBM: "a safe pair of hands", and "nobody ever got fired for buying Microsoft".

  10. JDX Gold badge

    Seems like GPT gives journalists a lot of opportunities to explain very confidently something they aren't expert on... ironically that's the problem they talk about with GPT itself.

    The SEO issue seems a distraction. As a human, I can find which results are good/crap and if AI has the same data available, it can theoretically/eventually do the same. It doesn't need a better set of searchable data than humans... it too can prioritise reddit, etc and can learn which sites are good. In fact a good system will automatically learn reddit/SO are good sources without anyone prompting it to.

    And yes, it is AI. It covers the entire field of NNs, Genetic algorithms, ML, and simple heuristics. Anything that gives the impression of being intelligent is AI, even quite rudimentary logic. It's an umbrella term. Obviously it has become the marketing term of choice for everything to be "improved by AI" but that is a separate nonsense.

  11. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    its search output contains 50 percent less irrelevant content than eight years ago

    but failed to mention that the output is larger. By 500%, give or take, but hey.

  12. Filippo Silver badge

    ChatGPT (and the like) are useful when you do not need a correct answer.

    This is not as stupid as it sounds - there are actually a lot of cases where it applies. There are those where there is no wrong answer, e.g. "suggest me a background for my D&D character". There are those where some answers are wrong, but only fairly obviously so, e.g. "give me ideas for a gin-based cocktail".

    There are also the cases where the bot will give non-obvious wrong answers that you have to spend time validating... but do so at a somewhat lower rate than Google. That's not stop-the-press exciting, but it's still valuable. Figuring out obscure technical errors can fall in this case, for example.

  13. newspuppy

    If Google existed in 1492... Columbus's voyage would never be funded.

    The link ranking system is clever.... but has serious issues...

    It is like a con artist asking a crowd where the ball is ..... and everyone is convinced it is under cup number one... but really.... it is elsewhere...

    Consensus among a large sample is good.. If the people sampled have 'the knowledge' amongst them.

    That is not always the case. We are searching for a new solution, or to gauge the efficacy of a new approach. We want to see the outliers that claim that the world is NOT flat, that there are other proper solutions that should be of interest.

    Link ranking, consensus... is mob rule of 'truth'. The same 'rules' that cast suspected witches into rivers to see if they float (guilty, to be burned at the stake) or drown (innocent). A loosing proposition for all. We have had institutions attempt to warp reality to their predefined fables, and the labelling and punishments of 'heretics' if they dare speak of anomalies or different truths.

    AI 'learning' by the regurgitating of 'facts' it has found is just like the current educational system. A terrible disservice. AI understanding relationships and how things work... is a different story.. Yet that is the concept of AI learning from a curated DB, with its own problems of bias, purposeful or not.

    We are just starting with 'AI'. We have a long distance to go. The most frightening thing for me, is the lack of qualified humans that just take answers from a 'system' as 'truth'.

    Our educational system needs to 'ignite' people to think, to analyse, and to see discrepancies.

    There have been several studies done with 'fixed' calculators and collage students. ( https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0223736 ). The lack of questioning of obviously incorrect results shows the danger of people using technology without thought.

    We need a two prong approach. Education... and the ability to show a complete picture in search results.... to help the user FIND what they are looking for.

    A long steep road ahead....

  14. DS999 Silver badge
    Meh

    Reddit as a source

    That strategy is only viable so long as it is not used by many people. If it becomes common for people to search that way, or search engines give reddit posts with more engagement a greater weight it will inevitably lead to SEOs polluting reddit with posts with fraudulent engagement the same way they creating spam sites propped up with link farms when Pagerank was king.

    1. Killfalcon

      Re: Reddit as a source

      To say nothing of the heroic on-going effort that Wikipedia's volunteers have to put in to keep the site from falling apart under the same pressures.

  15. WaveyDavey

    Excellent

    Just driving by to say that this is a really good opinion piece. Thanks.

  16. Snowy Silver badge
    Facepalm

    Share price goes down

    Does not equal to the company losing that money!

  17. Erik Beall

    AI that produces plausible sounding but frequently wrong answers? Try appending site:medium.com to get the same output but generated by humans trying to score a few bucks from scraping stackoverflow (badly). Actually, there's no need to restrict your search to medium to see its garbage, medium posts tend to be in the top results now, which used to be useful, sometimes, but they got worse and worse to the point medium became another nirvana of SEO dumpster fire.

  18. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    How long until we get a QAI bot

    I'm going to take a punt that most programmers/AI experts at MS and Google are reasonable well educated individuals and probably left to right of centre politically.

    However how long will it be until we get Alternative bots trained on Extreme Left/Right material or god forbid Qanon. Or a Trump Truthbot?

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