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A link to the whole conversation on Gemini is linked in the article. This is the conversation for anyone else interested
I was wondering if there was some kind of lead up to the response or even baiting, but it really was just out of nowhere. It was all just typical study help stuff. Some of the topics were darker, about abuse and such, but all in an academic context.
I was just about to query the context to see if this was in any way a “logical” answer and if so, to what extent the bot was baited as you put it, but yeah that doesn’t look great…
I agree, it was a standard academical work until it blowed. I wonder if speaking long enough with any LLM is enough to make them go crazy.
Yes, there is a degeneration of replies, the longer a conversation goes. Maybe this student kind of hit the jackpot by triggering a fiction writer reply inside the dataset. It is reproducible in a similar way as the student did, by asking many questions and at a certain point you'll notice that even simple facts get wrong. I personally have observed this with chatgpt multiple times. It's easier to trigger by using multiple similar but non related questions, as if the AI tries to push the wider context and chat history into the same LLM training "paths" but burns them out, blocks them that way and then tries to find a different direction, similar to the path electricity from a lightning strike can take.
I wonder if it’s related to training on website comments, which often role the same trajectory.