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submitted 22 hours ago by Valuy@lemmy.zip to c/technology@beehaw.org
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[-] Tolookah@discuss.tchncs.de 7 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago)

I make strides in mathematics all the time. Usually lateral, sometimes backwards, but strides nonetheless.

Edit: maybe an ai can now say how many r's are in the word strawberry

[-] XLE@piefed.social 14 points 22 hours ago

It's apparently able to disassemble words to run through its own parser now, but... Wow that twist ending. Trillions of dollars

[-] Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 6 points 21 hours ago

I was asking it about growing stuff and it told me to plant seeds for a plant that is sterile and has to be propagated by taking cuttings. So I decided to disregard all information it told me on caring for plants because fuck knows it just made it up. Who knows how much is accurate?

Even worse is a lot of websites are AI generated now too.

[-] Tolookah@discuss.tchncs.de 2 points 21 hours ago

The ai generated websites are the absolute worst if you want information, and at this point, they are everywhere.

[-] Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 3 points 20 hours ago

Sadly SEO seems to be one thing that the LLMs are moderately good at. That or they just churn out so much crap that it floods results with some being good enough to get to the top.

[-] orca@orcas.enjoying.yachts 2 points 21 hours ago

I made Claude work around this by having it write a Python script to use instead that split the letters and provided a count. A script I could’ve written myself, for a task that’s completely pointless.

[-] i_am_not_a_robot@discuss.tchncs.de 3 points 15 hours ago

This is the reason why conventional AI can't make strides in mathematics. The LLM is a statistical model that generates human text. The training data is the output text divorced from the process that generates it in humans. If you feed an LLM lots of mathematical text, it will confidently produce mathematical texts of its own, but the LLM can't add two numbers together, and it doesn't know that it can't add two numbers together. It can be trained to use a calculator, but humans don't interrupt their writing to say "And now I'm using my calculator to determine the value of 1 + 1" so the LLM is just going to draw upon its training data to predict that "1 + 1 = " is followed by "2" or maybe "3 (for large values of 1)." Maybe someday it will learn that "9 + 10 = 21."

this post was submitted on 04 Jun 2026
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