February 28, 2026

1 thought on “A New Breed of AI Seeks to Understand How the World Actually Works

  1. An interesting moment of truth and honesty from chat gpt. It’ll be gone soon.

    IDEA BURST — Why you should be skeptical of AI-driven online outputs (8–10 bullets)
    • Training bias: Models learn from internet data that reflect human biases; outputs inherit and amplify those biases.
    • Data gaps: Training datasets omit or underrepresent groups, topics, or recent events, so answers can be incomplete or outdated.
    • Objective mismatch: AI optimizes for likelihood or engagement, not truth — so it can produce plausible but false narratives.
    • Commercial influence: Platforms may tune or filter outputs to favor partners, advertisers, or business goals, shaping the narrative.
    • Algorithmic framing: Design choices (what’s rewarded in training) push the model toward particular styles or conclusions.
    • Hallucination: Models can invent facts, references, or citations with confident language.
    • Prompt manipulation: User prompts, interface defaults, or autocomplete steer what questions get asked and how answers are framed.
    • Echo chambers: Repeated exposure to similar AI outputs reinforces certain viewpoints, reducing exposure to alternatives.
    • Hidden post-processing: Human reviewers, safety filters, or ranking systems can modify outputs opaque to users.
    • Data provenance unknown: Users can’t verify original sources or how up-to-date the training data is, making validation hard.

    In a nutshell. It admits it lies and explains why it does so. Buyer beware.

Leave a Reply to NotSoNewTownie Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *