> there are people out there who think it's trash because we can trick it if we ask questions in weird ways.
Some of this sentiment comes form wanting AI to be predictable and for me stumbling into questions that the current models interpret oddly is not uncommon. There are a bunch of rules of thumbs that can be used to help when you run into a cases like this but no guarantee that they will work, or that the problem will remain solved after a model update, or across models.
There are a lot of rules of thumb you can follow to avoid getting bitten by a rattlesnake, but the easiest way is to just not pick up random snakes. I don't know where I'm going with this, but I am going for a walk.
> there are people out there who think it's trash because we can trick it if we ask questions in weird ways.
Some of this sentiment comes form wanting AI to be predictable and for me stumbling into questions that the current models interpret oddly is not uncommon. There are a bunch of rules of thumbs that can be used to help when you run into a cases like this but no guarantee that they will work, or that the problem will remain solved after a model update, or across models.