this post was submitted on 19 May 2025
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[–] conditional_soup@lemm.ee 89 points 1 day ago (42 children)

Idk, I think we're back to "it depends on how you use it". Once upon a time, the same was said of the internet in general, because people could just go online and copy and paste shit and share answers and stuff, but the Internet can also just be a really great educational resource in general. I think that using LLMs in non load-bearing "trust but verify" type roles (study buddies, brainstorming, very high level information searching) is actually really useful. One of my favorite uses of ChatGPT is when I have a concept so loose that I don't even know the right question to Google, I can just kind of chat with the LLM and potentially refine a narrower, more google-able subject.

[–] takeda@lemm.ee 130 points 1 day ago (20 children)

trust but verify

The thing is that LLM is a professional bullshitter. It is actually trained to produce text that can fool ordinary person into thinking that it was produced by a human. The facts come 2nd.

[–] Impleader@lemmy.world 22 points 1 day ago (3 children)

I don’t trust LLMs for anything based on facts or complex reasoning. I’m a lawyer and any time I try asking an LLM a legal question, I get an answer ranging from “technically wrong/incomplete, but I can see how you got there” to “absolute fabrication.”

I actually think the best current use for LLMs is for itinerary planning and organizing thoughts. They’re pretty good at creating coherent, logical schedules based on sets of simple criteria as well as making communications more succinct (although still not perfect).

[–] Honytawk@feddit.nl 1 points 4 hours ago

Can you try again using an LLM search engine like perplexity.ai?

Then just click on the link next to the information so you can validate where they got that info from?

LLMs aren't to be trusted, but that was never the point of them.

[–] takeda@lemm.ee 6 points 14 hours ago

Sadly, the best use case for LLM is to pretend to be a human on social media and influence their opinion.

Musk accidentally showed that's what they are actually using AI for, by having Grok inject disinformation about South Africa.

[–] sneekee_snek_17@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

The only substantial uses i have for it are occasional blurbs of R code for charts, rewording a sentence, or finding a precise word when I can't think of it

[–] NielsBohron@lemmy.world 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

It's decent at summarizing large blocks of text and pretty good for rewording things in a diplomatic/safe way. I used it the other day for work when I had to write a "staff appreciation" blurb and I couldn't come up with a reasonable way to take my 4 sentences of aggressively pro-union rhetoric and turn it into one sentence that comes off pro-union but not anti-capitalist (edit: it still needed a editing pass-through to put it in my own voice and add some details, but it definitely got me close to what I needed)

[–] sneekee_snek_17@lemmy.world 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I'd say it's good at things you don't need to be good

For assignments I'm consciously half-assing, or readings i don't have the time to thoroughly examine, sure, it's perfect

[–] NielsBohron@lemmy.world 3 points 1 day ago

exactly. For writing emails that will likely never be read by anyone in more than a cursory scan, for example. When I'm composing text, I can't turn off my fixation on finding the perfect wording, even when I know intellectually that "good enough is good enough." And "it's not great, but it gets the message across" is about the only strength of ChatGPT at this point.

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