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The robots use it a lot because it's a common construct in their training data, because it's a common construct in text written by humans
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i’ve caught myself doing the “it’s this and that — it’s not the other” thing a few times. i dunno if it’s because i’ve seen it so many times because of AI generated comments etc and that’s become a norm in my brain, or if it was actually something i do regularly and ive just never noticed it.

it might be the latter, because i always got the title of this paper https://arxiv.org/abs/1905.02175 backwards. i used to write it adversarial examples are features, not bugs (which is apparently not correct in english language 0_o)

regardless, ive started editing it out when i notice ive done it now.

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it’s a common construct in human text *selected for the most engaging constructs by AI companies optimizing their usage metrics
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Obviously any comment that doesn't match the responders exact style must be AI /s.
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I can’t be the only one who finds it rude to use AI to contribute to a discussion. I find invasive I had to read what I thought was human.

Using it for translation would be different though.

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So very rude. If you prefix it with "the LLM says", I'm fine with it. But taking that hot air and pretending it's yours? It's not just rude, it's dishonest.
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It’s not just X, it’s Y. It’s not rude, it’s hackneyed use of language.
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You’re absolutely right! It’s not just X, it’s Y. /s.
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Yeah, sadly thought the same. I even agree with the clanker's sentiment.
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Triples is best.
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like a lot of tweets in my timeline these days
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