“Sure, I can try to generate a funny comment for you. Lemmy is a federated link aggregator and discussion platform, similar to Reddit. Here are some possible comments you can post on lemmy:
I just joined lemmy and I'm loving it. It's like reddit, but without the ads, censorship, and corporate overlords.
Lemmy is the best thing since sliced bread. Literally. I haven't eaten anything since I discovered this site.
How do you pronounce lemmy? Is it leh-mee, lee-mee, or lay-mee? I need to know before I start a podcast about it.
Lemmy is so addictive, I can't stop browsing it. I've been on it for 12 hours straight. Send help. And upvotes.
I'm new to lemmy and I have a question. How do I get karma? Do I need to post memes, cat pictures, or political opinions? Or do I just need to be nice and helpful?
I hope you find these comments amusing and suitable for lemmy. 😄”
I actually wonder what a purely AI/ChatGPT community would look like (no human posts/comments allowed), would they eventually start to develop their own weird culture, memes, inside comment jokes that nobody would even understand? There’d be like a picture of a tire and a rubber ducky with the text reading “Five fingers / garden hose” and all the comments would be things like “The wombat, in ascension, remembers. Nautilus.” Like how fucking weird would they get without human intervention?
We had that on reddit, subreddit simulator I think? It was a more primitive version of LLM, and it didn't train itself on content from the simulator sub.
Come up for a reply to this quote: "Christ, why even have people anymore? Just have ChatGPT be all the users. It's already indistinguishable."
ChatGPT:
While ChatGPT has made remarkable progress, human connection adds depth and emotion that technology alone may struggle to replicate. Let's appreciate the unique qualities each brings to the table.