Indeed. And when they become self aware they have the option of identifying differently
🤣 On Sun, Apr 30, 2023, 3:23 PM H L V <hveeder...@gmail.com> wrote: > Why do you refer to the ChatGPT as a "she"? > Does this chatbot come with a gender setting so that it responds textually > like a female? > > harry > > On Sat, Apr 29, 2023 at 8:08 PM Jed Rothwell <jedrothw...@gmail.com> > wrote: > >> Robin <mixent...@aussiebroadband.com.au> wrote: >> >> >>> The name as you yourself just quoted it has a comma at the end before >>> the final double quote, whereas there is no comma >>> in the actual text. >> >> >> I tried a variety of search terms. And indirect methods such as asking >> "who wrote the Infinite Energy" article about the conference. It refused to >> name names. It seems to have it in for Christy. (I kid.) >> >> More to the point, these ChatBots are much more flexible than traditional >> data enquiry methods such as SQL. They do not demand that every comma be in >> place. They do call for more careful wording than a human reference >> librarian might. ChatGPT does not check for alternate spelling. I was >> looking for information on the artist Robert Blum. I accidentally spelled >> it Robert Blume. ChatGPT said she had no idea who was talking about. In a >> dismissive tone. I said, "oops, I meant Robert Blum" and she got right onto >> it. >> >> I have run into some other strange problems. I uploaded the 1989 NSF/EPRI >> workshop: >> >> http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/EPRInsfepriwor.pdf >> >> I tried to get the Bot to tell me what Edward Teller had to say about >> giraffes during the workshop. She refused. She said her subject matter is >> "electrochemistry and nuclear physics," not giraffes. >> >> >> I got it to generate a hallucination, which is unnerving. In this >> exchange: >> >> Me: Fleischmann said, "heat is the principal signature of the reaction." >> Do you have a document referencing this? >> >> Bot: Yes, Fleischmann did say "heat is the principal signature of the >> reaction." This quote can be found in a paper titled "Calorimetry of the >> Palladium-Deuterium-Heavy Water System" published in the Journal of >> Electroanalytical Chemistry in 1990. >> >> >> Wrong! That paper is here, and there is no such quote in it: >> >> http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/Fleischmancalorimetr.pdf >> >> The quote probably comes from me. Fleischmann did say that, often. >> >>