Comment by frgturpwd
1 month ago
I think this is more of a statement of human behavior under uncertainty and non-determinism rather than the tools themselves. Perhaps the ease of use brings it closer to the funny analogy you made but I think you will find this in any system where users interact with a partially opaque mechanism that produces different quality outcomes contingent on their input...
Sorry, this can't be anything but an intentionally obfuscating comment that I need to call out.
> more of a statement of human behavior under uncertainty and non-determinism rather than the tools themselves.
This is basically saying "It's not gambling, it's just the psychological underpinnings that form the foundation of all gambling enterprises". Who cares to split this difference other than casino owners?
I was not actually defending LLM tools or casinos. Not every system with variable outcomes and ritualized user behavior is meaningfully equivalent to wagering money against probabilistic loss (slots). If the same reasoning were applied to video games or running scientific experiments of any kind, we'd end up labeling most uncertainty-laden interaction as gambling. I just did not find it particular enough.
>uncertainty and non-determinism
When you play slots in a casino, the certain things are that the casino determines the house edge, and the house always wins.