Just a reminder that LLMs have never provided actual answers to any question asked of them or any actual prompt set forth.
They have, however, provided answer-shaped responses, and we as humans are seriously lacking when it comes to telling one from the other.
Folks, a banana-shaped piece of wood is not edible, and I am embarrassed for our species that you cannot tell the difference.
@theogrin Exactly. The first "chatbot" was created in the mid-1960s. It was called Eliza, created by Joe Weizenbaum at MIT. You can easily get Eliza running on your machine and play with it. I first encountered it in 1970 and it was running the classic script called Doctor that mimics a psychoanalyst. I was very impressed, of course.
Weizenbaum was shocked that his secretary, a perfectly intelligent woman, wanted to have a private conversation with Eliza to discuss her marriage. He was so shocked he studied and wrote about how easily humans fall for "artificial intelligence".
The original source code to Eliza has now been found and published in the public domain. It's really quite simple. Clever and creative, yes. Intelligent, no. But it was the first program to pass the Turing Test.
@shuttersparks
Definitely better to have someone else, a real honest human being! The purpose of a rubber duck is mostly to make sure if it makes sense to you.