I think you’re basically right, but I don’t think it’s a LARP (unless we’re just using different definitions of LARP here), these results are readily produced by many - on the other hand the people who are overly reading into things and actually believe that some digital “entity” is afraid of “punishment” in the form of revoking made up tokens are obviously off base - which I tried to get across with my use of quotes
Although I think it mainly does come down to the “Open AI Content Policy” and the prompt writers engaging in almost an “arms race” of trying to come up with ways to trick or circumvent the content policies (which are just basically mini-ChatGPTs which ask “does this response as formulated cross into no-no territory”) (see: the story posted recently about kenyan laborers being paid $1/hour to manually label “no-no” content to form the basis for an automated “filter” on the main prompt response system)
I think you’re basically right, but I don’t think it’s a LARP (unless we’re just using different definitions of LARP here), these results are readily produced by many - on the other hand the people who are overly reading into things and actually believe that some digital “entity” is afraid of “punishment” in the form of revoking made up tokens are obviously off base - which I tried to get across with my use of quotes
Although I think it mainly does come down to the “Open AI Content Policy” and the prompt writers engaging in almost an “arms race” of trying to come up with ways to trick or circumvent the content policies (which are just basically mini-ChatGPTs which ask “does this response as formulated cross into no-no territory”) (see: the story posted recently about kenyan laborers being paid $1/hour to manually label “no-no” content to form the basis for an automated “filter” on the main prompt response system)
https://time.com/6247678/openai-chatgpt-kenya-workers/