OpenAI just admitted it can’t identify AI-generated text. That’s bad for the internet and it could be really bad for AI models.::In January, OpenAI launched a system for identifying AI-generated text. This month, the company scrapped it.

  • @lily33@lemmy.world
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    52 years ago

    Not really. If it’s truly impossible to tell the text apart, than it doesn’t really pose a problem for training AI. Otherwise, next-gen AI will be able to tell apart text generated by current gen AI, and it will get filtered out. So only the most recent data will have unfiltered shitty AI-generated stuff, but they don’t train AI on super-recent text anyway.

    • @Womble@lemmy.world
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      172 years ago

      This is not the case. Model collapse is a studied phenomenon for LLMs and leads to deteriorating quality when models are trained on the data that comes from themselves. It might not be an issue if there were thousands of models out there but there are only 3-5 base models that all the others are derivatives of IIRC.

      • @lily33@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        I don’t see how that affects my point.

        • Today’s AI detector can’t tell apart the output of today’s LLM.
        • Future AI detector WILL be able to tell apart the output of today’s LLM.
        • Of course, future AI detector won’t be able to tell apart the output of future LLM.

        So at any point in time, only recent text could be “contaminated”. The claim that “all text after 2023 is forever contaminated” just isn’t true. Researchers would simply have to be a bit more careful including it.