Well if plagiarizing the entire internet is required, the least these models could do is provide sources. Hold AI to the same standards as everything else. AI can’t create anything new so it might as well tell me where it’s coming from. That way if an AI model is telling me to eat rocks I can at least see that it’s from a reddit post. And if it creates an image based on a prompt I’d like to know which images it used to generate the “new” image. With AI sucking up and regurgitating more and more of the Internet it’s only going to get more difficult to determine what’s factual information.
Hopefully this will be resolved before someone that isn’t very tech savvy gets hurt or worse because they decided to trust Google’s AI search. People like your parents or grandparents that barely understand how a smartphone works and are now being fed potentially dangerous information with no sources of where it came from.
Subtly?
Love it.
Am I stupid or are the two statements in the title completely unrelated?
You are not stupid.
The headline has literally nothing to do with the paper it is citing.
The paper is specifically looking at mat machine translation, not generation.
Nowhere does it state that 57% of content is AI generated.