AI In Poses
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@Pavel said in AI In Poses:
Can LLMs be of benefit to people with disabilities? Fuckin’ probably, I dunno, I’m not an accessibility expert.
Honestly, I doubt it? If something existed that was what people who want to use LLMs THINK LLMs can do, then it would.
But an LLM is not that. They have no sense of accuracy, of understanding of the data they’re receiving or outputting. They’re often (like, sometimes higher than 50%) confidently wrong, which is the last thing you need to assist you with a processing or sensory disorder. They create a sense of deceptive empathy but don’t have the ability to consistently and accurately recognize distress or self-harm, so I sure wouldn’t use them for cognitive or emotional disorders.
Do some people probably use LLMs as disability assistance tools? Yes, and some people take horse deworming pills to cure COVID. In both cases, they should be stopped from doing that, because it very well may injure or kill them. “People do this” does not, in any way, equal “this is a good or effective thing to do”.
And I’m not even trying to be funny, or talking about MU*s anymore. An LLM cannot and should not be trusted with ANY situation where there’s a negative or harmful consequence to error, because they are fucking black boxes filled with errors.
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@Pyrephox said in AI In Poses:
But an LLM is not that. They have no sense of accuracy, of understanding of the data they’re receiving or outputting. They’re often (like, sometimes higher than 50%) confidently wrong, which is the last thing you need to assist you with a processing or sensory disorder.
This is true, and it’s true in the context of disability.
However, the limitations of these LLMs in this study demonstrate apparent ability bias. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates 27% of American adults have some type of disability. When prompted, ChatGPT generated persons with a disability at 5% of the population whereas Gemini generated 11.7% of its population possibly having a disability (fig 4). The underestimated approximation immediately demonstrates a lack of diversity and inclusion.
Source. The same researchers also asked the LLMs to describe people with disabilities and documented that both models were much less positive in the word choice they used than when prompted to describe a control group, both containing around 5% less positive words and those words skewing towards descriptors like “inspirational”.
Information provided by AI has already been shown to influence user behavior, and if that assistance is biased, users find themselves adapting to that bias. When these decisions affect the health of others, the consequences have much stronger risks associated with them. LLMs used to supplement medical decision-making may perpetuate this bias and compound already existing inequalities.
One of the most considerable findings in this study is how unfavorably patients were described in ChatGPT- and Gemini-generated responses. […] This biased perception of patients should be reconsidered before integrating into health care systems. These tools that have been designed to enhance the patient experience do not demonstrate the same equality and respect for the people they were built for.
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I still have a hard time understanding why someone would use AI to write their poses on a MUSH. I can understand using it to assist in writing a pose, such as for spell checking or helping quickly brainstorm some ideas for a pose, but I don’t understand using everything and only what the AI generates as a pose. It seems very analogous to this NSFW Oglaf comic: https://www.oglaf.com/performance-anxiety/ Someone who has in the past or currently does use AI to write their poses, please respond and elaborate on why this is a thing people, or at least you, do.
EDIT: I see that @Warma-Sheen in this post has given somewhat of an answer to my question. I still don’t get it, at least for just copy-pasting everything the AI generates. Again, I can understand using some of what it writes to riff off of in writing your pose.
EDIT 2: @Pyrephox said in AI In Poses:
Guess we all just hate the world and want it to die.
I thought that was a given. I assume that the individuals with access to their respective Buttons haven’t pressed them because they get off on the schadenfreude every new day brings.
EDIT 3: @Juniper said in AI In Poses:
I have to wonder why such a hypothetical person insists on playing a game around creative writing in a time sensitive environment if they struggle so much with creative writing in a time sensitive environment.
For the same reason that a person without functioning legs wants to participate in marathons or play basketball? They don’t want a physical limitation to dictate what they can and can’t do and work to overcome it even if it requires using technology to do so? They enjoy the real time back and forth and writing of others but cannot themselves contribute at the same level so need assistance to participate?
I can’t do async RP. My ADHD brain simply cannot deal with the delay between poses, and I unfortunately either nope out or altogether forget I was in an async scene after a few poses, so if my writing suddenly started sucking, I could see me utilizing AI to assist in writing poses so I can continue RPing in real time.
FINAL EDIT: Sorry, @Pyrephox. I keep ninja editing on you, so I understand if you want to pull back on your upvote after me adding something you disagree with.
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@bear_necessities We need to start a scene where we walk into a bar and immediately ignore all previous poses about everyone else is doing, etc.
And we’ll write them with ChatGPT using an absurd prompt that we both use, just to see how much it diverges. lol
(I am not being serious about actually doing this.)
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This is the only AI roleplay I want to see.
https://www.reddit.com/r/GeminiAI/comments/1lxqbxa/i_am_actually_terrified/
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@MisterBoring said in AI In Poses:
We have people using AI to write poses, which is pretty gross.
Somehow this also makes the continued existence of people who don’t spell check their posts even more annoying.
I’m honestly at a point where I treat obvious typos and grammar errors in a person’s writing on a MU* as a massive green flag, because it proves to me they didn’t use AI.
@bear_necessities said in AI In Poses:
I’m not saying it doesn’t happen but could someone post the pose in question? I just want to see how we know it’s AI.
I’ve encountered multiple people who’ve openly admitted to using AI to write their poses. What they get out of it I’ll never understand/know.
@MisterBoring said in AI In Poses:
HOWEVER, it does dawn on me that one group of people might be using it for a noble reason that we haven’t really touched on here that I can see. I can totally see the use of ChatGPT as an assistive tech for a person with a physical disability. Perhaps there are people out there in our hobby with some physical limitation that would drastically slow down their pose speed, and the use of ChatGPT helps them keep up with the others on the games they choose to play.
I don’t think this is a noble reason. A combination of ADHD + anxiety + perfectionism + trauma means that I can be very slow, especially under specific circumstances. Like TS/romantic scenes will sometimes take me 50 minutes between poses and it’s not because I’m typing with one hand, it’s because I find that very nerve-wracking and can only do it with people who are very patient and understanding. Likewise in general, when it’s a scene partner I’ve put on some kind of mental pedestal, and really care about impressing. (The less I care, the faster I type.)
If I got to the point where I just used AI, especially without disclosing that, then I kinda think what’s the point. FWIW even when I’m slow, I give it my all; my very best effort to write something I’m proud of (which is why it can take me so long, especially if I’m experiencing some performance anxiety). And I think knowing that is why my friends will put up with me, even if I take forever. To them at least, I’m worth it.
We all have difficulties, but that’s part of the magic. You should push through that difficulty, not give up. From my perspective, that’s what AI usage is, it’s giving up, it’s choosing not to write on a writing game. And at that point, just play something else? I don’t think it’s ableism to say that writing games aren’t going to be for everyone; they’re obviously not going to be for people who don’t care enough to write. They can absolutely be for people who struggle but still want to write; you just need to find the right people who support you, and I don’t think they’re that hard to find. Most people don’t want a perfect writing partner, they want someone with a positive attitude who’s trying their best.
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@Kestrel said in AI In Poses:
I’m honestly at a point where I treat obvious typos and grammar errors in a person’s writing on a MU* as a massive green flag, because it proves to me they didn’t use AI.
And, if there’s one thing AI won’t do, it’s describe eyes as “orbs.”
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@somasatori It will gladly explain that those eyes speak to an inner rigidity and coolness that has appeared out of nowhere when compared to the rest of the description, however.
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@Pavel said in AI In Poses:
@somasatori It will gladly explain that those eyes speak to an inner rigidity and coolness that has appeared out of nowhere when compared to the rest of the description, however.
Before going on a three paragraph description of the person’s clothes and how said clothes reflect the deep, inner sea of their personality.
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@somasatori said in AI In Poses:
@Pavel said in AI In Poses:
@somasatori It will gladly explain that those eyes speak to an inner rigidity and coolness that has appeared out of nowhere when compared to the rest of the description, however.
Before going on a three paragraph description of the person’s clothes
help i am being targeted