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Articles already have a summary at the top due to the page format, why was AI shoved into the process?
Because AI
Grok please ELI5 this comment so i can understand it
I know your comment was /s bit I cant not repost this:
Hahaha i too have that saved. I love it so much.
I can't wait until this "put LLMs in everything" phase is over.
So they:
- Didn't ask editors/users
- noticed loud and overwhelmingly negative feedback
- "paused" the program
They still don't get it. There's very little practical use for LLMs in general, and certainly not in scholastic spaces. The content is all user-generated anyway, so what's even the point? It's not saving them any money.
Also it seems like a giant waste of resources for a company that constantly runs giant banners asking for money and claiming to basically be on there verge of closing up every time you visit their site.
I also think that generating blob summaries just goes towards brain rot things we see everywhere on the web that's just destroying people's attention spam. Wikipedia is kind of good to read something that is long enough and not just some quick, simplistic and brain rotting inducing blob
If her list were straight talk:
- Were gonna make up shit
- But don’t worry we’ll manually label it what could go wrong
- Dang no one was fooled let’s figure out a different way to pollute everything with alternative facts
Since much (so-called) "AI" basic training data depends on Wikipedia, wouldn't this create a feedback loop that could quickly degenerate ?
Yes
Only if the summary is included in the training data.
Lol, the source data for all AI is starting to use AI to summarize.
Have you ever tried to zip a zipfile?
But then on the other hand, as compilers become better, they become more efficient at compiling their own source code...
Yeah but the compilers compile improved versions. Like, if you manually curated the summaries to be even better, then fed it to AI to produce a new summary you also curate... you'll end up with a carefully hand-trained LLM.
So if the AI generated summaries are better than man made summaries, this would not be an issue would it?
If AI constantly refined its own output, sure, unless it hits a wall eventually or starts spewing bullshit because of some quirk of training. But I doubt it could learn to summarise better without external input, just like a compiler won't produce a more optimised version of itself without human development work.
I passionately hate the corpo speech she's using. This fake list of "things she's done wrong but now she'll do them right, pinky promise!!" whilst completely ignoring the actual reason for the pushback they've received (which boils down to "fuck your AI, keep it out") is typical management behavior after they were caught trying to screw over the workers in some way.
We're going to screw you over one way or the other, we just should have communicated it better!
Basically this.
I don't see how AI could benefit wikipedia. Just the power consumption alone isn't worth it. Wiki is one of the rare AI free zones, which is a reason why it is good
I canceled my recurring over this about a week ago, explaining that this was the reason. One of their people sent me a lengthy response that I appreciated. Still going to wait a year before I reinstate it, hopefully they fully move on from this idea by then. It sounded a lot like this though, kinda wishy washy.
Is there a way for us to complain to wikipedia about this? I contribute money every year, and I will 100% stop if they're stomping more LLM-slop down my throat.
Edit: You can contribute to the discussion in the link, and you can email them at addresses found here: https://wikimediafoundation.org/about/contact/
If they thought this would be well-received they wouldn't have sprung it on people. The fact that they're only "pausing the launch of the experiment" means they're going to do it again once the backlash has subsided.
RIP Wikipedia, it was a fun 24 years.
Not everything is black and white, you know. Just because they have this blunder, doesn't mean they're down for good. The fact they're willing to listen to feedback, whatever their reason was, still shows some good sign.
Also keep in mind the organization than runs it has a lot of people, each with their own agenda, some with bad ones but extremely useful.
I mean yeah, sure, do 'leave' Wikipedia if you want. I'm curious to where you'd go.
Me saying "RIP" was an attempt at hyperbole. That being said, shoehorning AI into something for which a big selling point is that it's user-made is a gigantic misstep - Maybe they'll listen to everybody, but given that they tried it at all, I can't see them properly backing down. Especially when it was worded as "pausing" the experiment.
the fact they're willing to listen to feedback, whatever their reason was, is a good sign
Oh you have so much to learn about companies fucking their users over if you think this is the end of them trying to shove AI into Wikipedia
Then teach me daddy~
I don't think Wikipedia is for the benefit of users anymore, what even are the alternatives? Leftypedia? Definitely not Britannica
It does sound like it could be handy
Noo Wikipedia why would you do this
Summarization is one of the things LLMs are pretty good at. Same for the other thing where Wikipedia talked about auto-generating the "simple article" variants that are normally managed by hand to dumb down content.
But if they're pushing these tools, they need to be pushed as handy tools for editors to consider leveraging, not forced behavior for end users.
Summaries that look good are something LLMs can do, but not summaries that actually have a higher ratio of important/unimportant than the source, nor ones that keep things accurate. That last one is super mandatory on something like an encyclopedia.
The only application I've kind of liked so far has been the one on Amazon that summarizes the content of the reviews. Seems relatively accurate in general.
If we need summaries, let's let a human being write the summaries. We are already experts at writing. We love doing it.