I just wanted to point out that while it has the same label, it does not always contain the same content.
I just wanted to point out that while it has the same label, it does not always contain the same content.
So there is no difference for you between e.g. the King James Bible, the NIV Bible, or the English Bible from 1631?
How about the ten commandments as shown in the English Bible print from 1631?
Trump is easy to understand:
Trump opens mouth -> Trump lies.
Well, the LLM was prompted to find the odd one. Which I consider a (relatively) easy one. Reading the headline, I thought that the LLM was able to point this out by itself, like “Excuse me, but you had one sentence about pizza toppings in your text about programming. Was that intended to be there for some reason, or just a mistaken CTRL-V?”
Some of those spam fighters did this, emulating an old bumbling man who avoided any “yes” like answers that could be malinterpreted as consent to anything, and kept the caller busy for many minutes with pauses, uncommitted “Hmms”, and useless questions. But I doubt that this program is available anywhere.
OK, now I get your point. Yes, those “ten commandments” would be funny to see in the classrooms. It might even teach some of the hardcore Christians and Bible thumpers something new…