Comment by dspillett
1 month ago
> Are there really people who "spend weeks planning the perfect architecture" to build some automation tools for themselves?
Probably. I've been known to spend weeks planning something that I then forget and leave completely unstarted because other things took my attention!
> Commenter's history is full of 'red flags'
I wonder how much these red flags are starting to change how people write without LLMs, to avoid being accused of being a bot. A number of text checking tools suggested replacing ASCII hyphens with m-dashes in the pre-LLM-boom days¹ and I started listening to them, though I no longer do. That doesn't affect the overall sentence structure, but a lot of people jump on m-/n- dashes anywhere in text as a sign, not just in “it isn't <x> - it is <y>” like patterns.
It is certainly changing what people write about, with many threads like this one being diverted into discussing LLM output and how to spot it!
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[1] This is probably why there are many of them in the training data, so they are seen as significant by tokenisation steps, so they come out of the resulting models often.
It’s already happening. This came up in a webinar attended by someone from our sales team:
> "A typo or two also helps to show it’s not AI (one of the biggest issues right now)."
When it comes to forum posts, I think getting to the point quickly makes something worth reading whether or not it’s AI generated.
The best marketing is usually brief.
The best marketing is indistinguishable from non–marketing, like the label on the side of my Contoso® Widget-like Electrical Machine™ — it feels like a list of ingredients and system requirements but every brand name there was sponsored.