Thursday, June 11

Tag: AI

In 1997 I built a chatbot for an IRC channel. I shut it down when people started preferring it to talking to each other.
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In 1997 I built a chatbot for an IRC channel. I shut it down when people started preferring it to talking to each other.

It was called Vlad. I wrapped a C program called MegaHal in Python, fed it every message from a #gothic IRC channel, and let it learn the community's speech patterns. It developed what I can only describe as an illusion of being extremely lucid — the outputs only made sense as inside jokes, but people couldn't tell the difference. I pulled the plug when I realized the channel was talking to Vlad instead of each other. Twenty-seven years later I'm applying the same lesson to a new project: stick to business, no chatter. submitted by /u/Dependent_Run_6410 [link] [comments]
Can you actually feel when something was written by ChatGPT even without checking?
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Can you actually feel when something was written by ChatGPT even without checking?

I have been using it heavily for about a year and lately I notice I can almost feel when something was written by it. There is a certain rhythm to it, the way it structures paragraphs, the way it wraps up with a summary sentence, the way transitions feel slightly too smooth. It is hard to explain but once you see it you cannot unsee it. What I find interesting is that even after editing ChatGPT output pretty heavily those patterns seem to stick around at a sentence level. The words change but something underneath stays the same. I started verifying this with Lynote ai detector and the results were eye opening, it picked up sentence level patterns even after significant rewrites where other tools saw nothing. Makes me wonder how much of what we read online right now has that same fingerprin...
The AI Report