(2023-04-06, 05:05 PM)ersby Wrote: I've been tinkering with GPT too, asking it questions about something I knew a lot about (Beatles bootlegs) and it did well. Encouraged, I asked it about a topic I've only recently become curious about - black musicians in London in the 1700s and 1800s - and it all seemed totally plausible until I asked about a club or society of black musicians during those years. It told me about the African Chapel on Tottenham Court Road and gave plenty of details, including it addresses (it moved at some point) and references. But I couldn't find anything about it anywhere else. Not in the references it gave, nor googling it (I even asked GPT what to google, but no joy with its suggestions). Now, it may be it does exist and I'm an idiot, but it's frustrating that I can't be sure.
Anyway, that happened about a week ago and then today I saw this
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...ke-article
"In response to being asked about articles on this subject, the AI had simply made some up. Its fluency, and the vast training data it is built on, meant that the existence of the invented piece even seemed believable to the person who absolutely hadn’t written it."
But now I'm curious as to how much I can "learn" about the African Chapel, assuming it's entirely fictional.
You could ask the Bing variant of chatGPT. It’s connected to the internet and provides sources for it’s claims.