this post was submitted on 03 May 2025
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[–] [email protected] -1 points 6 hours ago* (last edited 6 hours ago) (1 children)

I disagree. It may seem that way if that's all you look at and/or you buy the BS coming from the LLM hype machine, but IMO it's really no different than the leap to the internet or search engines. Yes, we open ourselves up to a ton of misinformation, shifting job market etc, but we also get a suite of interesting tools that'll shake themselves out over the coming years to help improve productivity.

It's a big change, for sure, but it's one we'll navigate, probably in similar ways that we've navigated other challenges, like scams involving spoofed webpages or fake calls. We'll figure out who to trust and how to verify that we're getting the right info from them.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 hours ago (1 children)

LLMs are not like the birth of the internet. LLMs are more like what came after when marketing took over the roadmap. We had AI before LLMs, and it delivered high quality search results. Now we have search powered by LLMs and the quality is dramatically lower.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 3 hours ago

Sure, and we had an internet before the world wide web (ARPANET). But that wasn't hugely influential until it was expanded into what's now the Internet. And that evolved into the world wide web after 20-ish years. Each step was a pretty monumental change, and built on concepts from before.

LLMs are no different. Yes they're built on older tech, but that doesn't change the fact that they're a monumental shift from what we had before.

Let's look at access to information and misinformation. The process was something like this:

  1. Physical encyclopedias, newspapers, etc
  2. Digital, offline encyclopedias and physical newspapers
  3. Online encyclopedias and news
  4. SEO and the rise of blog/news spam - misinformation is intentional or negligent
  5. Early AI tools - misinformation from hallucinations is largely also accidental
  6. Misinformation in AI tools becomes intentional

We're in the transition from 5 to 6, which is similar to the transition from 3 to 4. I'm old enough to have seen each of these transitions.

The way people interact with the world is fundamentally different now than it was before LLMs came out, just like the transition from offline to online computing. And just like people navigated the transition to SEO nonsense, people need to navigate he transition to LLM nonsense. It's quite literally a paradigm shift.