cross-posted from: https://infosec.pub/post/24994013
CJR study shows AI search services misinform users and ignore publisher exclusion requests.
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Move fast and break things, brah!
Training AI with internet content was always going to fail, as at least 60% of users online are trolls. It’s even dumber than expecting you can have a child from anal sex.
There was that one time when an AI gave a pizza recipe including gluing the cheese down with Elmer’s glue, because that was suggested as a joke on Reddit once.
There will never be such a thing as a useful LLM.
My level of shitposting has increased dramatically ever since I learned that I’m not just trolling the person I replied to, but future generations to come. You gotta have a legacy you’re proud of before you kick the bucket, ya know what I mean?
Society grows great when old men plant shitposts whose shade they know they shall never sit in.
but you can, it’s about as likely as having one from a thigh-job but is technically not impossible.
Well, that’s less bad than 100% SEO optimized garbage with LLM generated spam stories around a few Amazon links.
Exactly. I would like to know the baseline.
I’m shocked!
Shocked I tell you!
Only 60%‽
Blows my mind that it’s so low.
I searched for pictures of Uranus recently. Google gave me pictures of Jupiter and then the ai description on top chided me telling me that what was shown were pictures of Jupiter, not Uranus. 20 years ago it would have just worked.
Stupid that we have to do this, but add
before:2022
and it filters out all the slop
Oh man, that’s too good. Thanks for sharing this. Now I kinda want to ask it about blue waffles, but I’m a little scared to.
The same technology Elon Musk wants to use to process your taxes everyone!
The same technology the billionaire class wants I use to eliminate payroll entirely
Well yeah, they get their information from the Internet. Garbage in. Garbage out.
60% of the time it works every time
Fixing all the shit AI breaks is going to create a lot of jobs
From the article…
Surprisingly, premium paid versions of these AI search tools fared even worse in certain respects. Perplexity Pro ($20/month) and Grok 3’s premium service ($40/month) confidently delivered incorrect responses more often than their free counterparts.
Though these premium models correctly answered a higher number of prompts, their reluctance to decline uncertain responses drove higher overall error rates.
It’s strongly dependent on how you use it. Personally, I started out as a skeptic but by now I’m quite won over by LLM-aided search. For example, I was recently looking for an academic that had published some result I could describe in rough terms, but whose name and affiliation I was drawing a blank on. Several regular web searches yielded nothing, but Deepseek’s web search gave the result first try.
(Though, Google’s own AI search is strangely bad compared to others, so I don’t use that.)
The flip side is that for a lot of routine info that I previously used Google to find, like getting a quick and basic recipe for apple pie crust, the normal search results are now enshittified by ad-optimized slop. So in many cases I find it better to use a non-web-search LLM instead. If it matters, I always have the option of verifying the LLM’s output with a manual search.
I knew this whole hype was way overblown. This AI is “good” but not replace every employee with it good.