this post was submitted on 02 Sep 2024
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The comment that you're replying to is fairly specifically criticising the usage of the word "hallucination" to misrepresent the nature of the undesirable LLM output, in the context of people selling you stuff by what it is not.
It is not "pushing" another "thing to criticise about LLMs". OK? I have my fair share of criticism against LLMs themselves, but that is not what I'm doing right now.
When we extend analogies they often break in the process. That's the case here.
Originally the analogy works because it shows a phony selling a product by what it is not. By making the phony to precompute 4*10¹² equations (a completely unrealistic situation), he stops being a phony to become a muppet doing things the hard way.
Emphases mine. Those "ifs" represent a completely unrealistic situation, that does not show anything useful about the real situation.
We know that LLMs output "hallucinations" way more than just once, or 0.000001% of the time. They're common enough to show you how LLMs work.