The device-fixer started breaking devices instead of fixing them. Tell it to fix itself!
sometimes the presently available solutions are subpar. people go with what's available. it's not ideal, but it is practical.
The amount of people who confidently tell on themselves in these discussions continues to bum me out.
No, this is career ending high stakes. it requires old school "actually check a record of reality" type methods, like a database query or http get to one of the many services that hold this info.
I kind of hate the idea, but you probably could do a lazy LLM check of every paper and every citation and have it flag possible wrong (second sense) citations for human review
But you'd need a LOT of tokens and a LOT of human-hours
And then what, we're done? How have we avoided the need for the same exhaustive human review? It only saves human review time if you trust the LLM not to miss things.
An LLM could replace the random sampling. It doesn't need to be particularly good for the approach to provide value. I would worry about LLM bias though.
Another thing to consider is that readers can detect fake citations after publication, report to arXiv, and the author gets banned.