ChatGPT Is Nothing Like a Human, Says Linguist Emily Bender

#artificialintelligence 

This article was featured in One Great Story, New York's reading recommendation newsletter. Sign up here to get it nightly. But before Microsoft's Bing started cranking out creepy love letters; before Meta's Galactica spewed racist rants; before ChatGPT began writing such perfectly decent college essays that some professors said, "Screw it, I'll just stop grading"; and before tech reporters sprinted to claw back claims that AI was the future of search, maybe the future of everything else, too, Emily M. Bender co-wrote the octopus paper. Bender is a computational linguist at the University of Washington. She published the paper in 2020 with fellow computational linguist Alexander Koller. The goal was to illustrate what large language models, or LLMs -- the technology behind chatbots like ChatGPT -- can and cannot do. Say that A and B, both fluent speakers of English, are independently stranded on two uninhabited islands. They soon discover that previous visitors to these islands have ...

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