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Semantic ablation: Why AI writing is boring and dangerous
(www.theregister.com)
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I'm not sure if that writer gets all the details right when it comes to how it works, but I do like "semantic ablation." It's good to finally have a name for that after we've already seen so much of it.
It's statistical blandness writ large.
The stack of single-sentence paragraphs after the introduction paragraph trying so hard to have an impact.
The tendency to put "not X, not Y, just Z" everywhere.
The perfect conclusion written at the end of each piece , summarising three bland paragraphs with yet another bland paragraph.
Statistically regurgitated bullshit, all of it
A stack of single-sentence paragraphs, you say?
With a perfect conclusion written at the end you say?
Methinks I've seen this before somewhere, I say.
Dare to be different, I say.
Ha, If you're alluding to my post being similar to generated output, you obviously haven't experienced the pure blandness of LLMs trying to write engaging content.
I wondered if what I said would come across as criticism - even though I took care to avoid alluding to your comment NOT being statistically bland (which ironically, due to your third point, would have begun to imply that it WAS, despite my saying explicitly the opposite).
So we are proving real-time why LLMs go to such lengths to be bland - their goal of ~~not offending anyone~~ making their shareholders more money does not allow them to take those kinds of risks, as I just did above.
All the more so with their child-like yet incurious audience noping out at the first hint of difficulty ~~understanding~~ producing dopamine upon reading anything at all - not attempting clarification or expounding additional details as just you did.
So kudos I suppose we just proved our humanity? Now to do that 10k times a day for the rest of our natural lives...
Could have just said popularity breeds mediocrity and it works on that level, but I appreciate this term too.