Prompt injection is harder than people believe.
Just try it on your own chatbot account. Your chat bot probably won’t fall for it.
Prompt injection is harder than people believe.
Just try it on your own chatbot account. Your chat bot probably won’t fall for it.


Calling it a Korean film is kind of a stretch, no? It was produced by Sony and published by Netflix, and one of the two director/writers was a White American dude.


And people here keep getting ruder and ruder for no reason. It’s not like I have any actual authority to make this happen.
I mean, you could have just said “I don’t like that idea because I’m not creative or innovative enough to contribute something of value that would be cited by others, so that would have prevented me for padding my resume with the stuff that I was able to produce.” That would have been much more courteous.


The woman didn’t sign a EULA with the vendor.
I would say your three reqs are met.
Both Sides™


Sue the software company for defamation.


Just being “quotable” isn’t going to get you cited (and thus paid). Your work has to be worth being quoted.
Right now, the vast vast majority of published academic work is absolute garbage that no one will ever care about. Even most of the people writing and publishing the garbage barely care about their own garbage. It’s just cranking gears to pad their resumes.
If we rewarded people for high value work, and incentivised cranking out garbage, then we would get more high value work.


And how will has that really worked?


Wouldn’t publishing a lot of quotation worthy work be better than publishing a lot of work that isn’t quotation worthy?
Just make sure they are really uncomfortable when they do it.


Right. And shouldn’t those people be compensated for their work?


Under my system, a reseacher would be incentivised to sue the publisher claiming their research should have been cited. If anything it would create “research trolls”.
However, a researcher could purchase professional insurance that would handle those claims.
Didn’t forget Oprah and all the other super rich women that could have said or done something that willingly turned a blind eye for decades.


Can’t or won’t?
I don’t deny that male friends can be toxic. What can be worse still is that the man does share these videos with his friends, and the videos themselves are toxic and reinforce toxic behaviors and thoughts, and the friends share affirmations with the man about the video. That happens a lot too.
That man is probably repeatedly sharing videos with the woman because he’s hoping that she returns the same affirmations that his friends do.
I’m just trying to explain the “urge” described in the meme. That’s all.
And at the same time either aggressively or passive aggressively making it clear to him that she is disinterested in the video, which is reinforcing the man’s understanding that she is also disinterested in whatever it was that he found interest in. (That’s literally the whole subtext of the meme.)
Just saying that men share their concerns and feelings differently than women. Men very often share concerns and feelings indirectly. If a guy is repeatedly sharing YouTube videos with the woman that the woman doesn’t find funny or interesting, there is probably a reason the man is sharing them. An active listening woman might ask the man something like “How do you feel about this video?”
Because the meme was literally about the dude.


Did you reply to the wrong comment?
I don’t understand the complete hatred of all forms of AI. Like, this tool doesn’t seem any different to me than any other rendering this that game makers use.