Remember when everyone was meming about AI mushroom books poisoning people?
Remember when everyone was meming about AI mushroom books poisoning people?
Reddit - Dive into anything
Looks like it might actually have happened.
Remember when everyone was meming about AI mushroom books poisoning people?
Reddit - Dive into anything
Looks like it might actually have happened.
If this turns out to be real, I suspect its gonna be a major shitshow - not only for the publisher, but for the AI industry as a whole.
For the publisher, they're gonna be lambasted for endangering people's lives for a quick AI-printed buck.
For AI, its gonna be yet another indictment of an industry that's seen fit to put technology, profits, basically everything over human lives - whether in the "AI Safety" criti-hype which implicitly suggests culpability for bringing about an apocalypse straight out of sci-fi, or in the myriad ways they are making the world worse right now.
If it turns out to be read. I have my doubts.
Update: Whilst the the story's veracity remains unconfirmed as of this writing, it has gone on to become a shitshow for the AI industry anyways - turns out the story got posted on Twitter and proceeded to go viral.
Assuming its fabricated, I suspect OP took their cues from this 404 Media report made a year ago, which warned about the flood of ChatGPT-generated mycology books and their potentially fatal effects.
As for people believing it, I'm not shocked - the AI bubble has caused widespread harm to basically every aspect of society, and the AI industry is viewed (rightfully so, I'd say) as having willingly caused said harm by developing and releasing AI systems, and as utterly unrepentant about it.
Additionally, those who use AI are viewed (once again, rightfully so) as unrepentant scumbags of the highest order, entirely willing to defraud and hurt others to make a quick buck.
With both those in mind, I wouldn't blame anyone for immediately believing it.
Maybe I'm old fashioned but,
I still start by asking someone who knows about the thing what books they might recommend. And I know mushrooms are especially problematic, so I go look for um, active communities of people who aren't dead from eating the wrong mushrooms.
Is it possible, that we're looking too far away from accountable sources when we route our knowledge searches through noisy corporate slops?
I'd be too pissed off to take it to friggin reddit. I don't buy it.
I refuse to lend any credibility at all to some anonymous controversial reddit post made from a throwaway. There are way too many of that nowadays and I'd bet a toonie a large proportion of those are either faked to drive engagement or for shits and giggles.
Besides, this is the internet... Didn't anybody get the lesson with the bonsai kittens?!
Throwaways are the standard for the legal advice subreddits, and some are clearly fiction. This one sounds legit
(what’s a toonie?)
Yeah sorry about that, a toonie is 2 Canadian dollars.
lol@OP not mentioning it's from Amazon. I bet posting something negative about a potential reddit business partner would get their account nuked.
Does the CEO of Totally-Not-Amazon know that his company is signing it's name to stupid letters?
I could easily see the vendor on Amazon (which is sent/replied to through Amazon addresses for transparency/documentation) sending this nonsense.
Wouldn't even surprise me if that's true, with today's batshit insane corporate-written laws.