Comment by j2kun
20 hours ago
The author calls the mistakes "confirmed hallucinations" without proof (just more or less evidence). The data never "speak for itself." The author curates the data and crafts a story about it. This story presented here is very suggestive (even using the term "hallucination" is suggestive). But calling it "100 suspected hallucinations", or "25 very likely hallucinations" does less for the author's end goal: selling their service.
Obviously a post on a startup's blog will be more editorialized than an academic paper. Still, this seems like an important discussion to have.