LLMs aren't that good
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Date: April 26th, 2025 9:48 AM Author: novus homo (gunneratttt)
the only reason i think lawyers may be more protected is because we have laws that give us a monopoly and protection from competition. very much of my job could already be outsourced but for the government requiring someone with a law degree and license to do it.
i certainly agree that AI will be capable obviating a lot of legal work. the question is whether we'll let it. i mean, 99% of biglaw does not need to be done and is purposefully juicing up a bill with fakework so the client can prove they did their due diligence. they're not having the 5th associate review something that 4 other competent attorneys reviewed "just to be sure everything correct."
most of law already is makework and so ai automating it wouldn't serve the purpose the work is being done for.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5716519&forum_id=2#48882521) |
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Date: April 26th, 2025 2:34 PM Author: ,.,.,.,....,.,..,.,.,.
I don’t see how rates can be maintained when all of the attorneys involved are feeding the tasks to LLMs to do the actual work. Even though they are signing off on it, there would be competition to take on more work since the actual costs involved would be so low. Partners will just squeeze everyone to manage more work and rates will fall. There’s no plausible equilibrium where biglaw associates get to jack off for 7 hours a day and bill at the same rates.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5716519&forum_id=2#48883141) |
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Date: April 26th, 2025 10:02 AM Author: Oh, you travel? ( )
you're ignoring everything that goes into the development, QA, and production release of some piece of shit business software. Intake, SLAs, unit and penetration testing, deployment pipelines, debugging, User Acceptance Testing, etc.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5716519&forum_id=2#48882551) |
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Date: April 26th, 2025 10:09 AM
Author: https://imgur.com/a/o2g8xYK
No one is using AI to do anything important.
NO | ONE
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5716519&forum_id=2#48882569) |
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Date: April 26th, 2025 2:14 PM Author: ,.,.,.,....,.,..,.,.,.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5716519&forum_id=2#48883112) |
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Date: April 26th, 2025 8:09 PM
Author: https://imgur.com/a/o2g8xYK
It doesn't "get" people at all. I once asked it what an American tourist would think of Tenochtitlan pre-conquest, and it said something about how they'd admire the culture and shit. I had to gently suggest that people might be traumatized by seeing children killed in sacrificial ceremonies.
It also has a hard time understanding how people can be motivated by insults. If two people are fighting, the AI thinks there's some rationale to it. It's never going to guess that it started over an insult.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5716519&forum_id=2#48883735) |
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Date: April 27th, 2025 12:39 AM
Author: .,.,...,..,.,..:,,:,...,:::,.,.,:,.,,:.,:.,:.::,.
I just asked chatgpt 4.5 this because I couldn't believe it wouldn't mention this. Sure enough:
An American tourist visiting Tenochtitlan before the Spanish conquest would likely have been astonished, impressed, and overwhelmed by several distinctive features:
### 1. **Scale and Grandeur**
Upon entering the city, a tourist would be awed by its enormous scale—larger and more densely populated than any European city at the time. With approximately 200,000 residents, Tenochtitlan was among the world’s largest cities.
### 2. **Engineering Marvels**
They would marvel at the sophisticated engineering of Tenochtitlan, built upon artificial islands (chinampas) within Lake Texcoco. The extensive canals, bridges, aqueducts, and causeways connecting the city to the mainland would have seemed extraordinary, evoking comparisons to Venice but on a much larger scale.
### 3. **Cleanliness and Orderliness**
Tenochtitlan was exceptionally clean compared to contemporary European cities. A visitor would be struck by how carefully waste management, daily street-cleaning, and sanitation were handled, noticing far fewer unpleasant odors and more organized spaces than they might expect from a medieval city.
### 4. **Markets and Trade**
A tourist visiting Tlatelolco market would be stunned by its bustling activity, sheer size, and variety of goods—from exotic fruits, vegetables, and spices, to beautiful textiles, jade ornaments, obsidian weapons, and vivid featherwork. The market's vibrancy would resemble a modern open-air bazaar, but on a grander and more vibrant scale.
### 5. **Architecture and Temples**
The monumental temples, particularly the Great Pyramid (Templo Mayor), towering impressively over the city, would astonish a visitor. Painted vividly and adorned with sculptures depicting gods and mythological beings, the structures would stand in stark contrast to the stone castles and cathedrals familiar to Europeans.
### 6. **Cultural Practices**
While much would be fascinating, certain cultural practices—such as human sacrifice rituals atop pyramids—might deeply unsettle a modern tourist. Observing the intricate ceremonial rites, including the offering of hearts to the gods, would likely provoke shock and unease.
### 7. **Gardens and Greenery**
The lush, productive chinampa gardens, where flowers, maize, beans, tomatoes, and chili peppers grew abundantly, would amaze visitors, highlighting the Aztec mastery of agriculture and sustainability.
### 8. **Social Order and Sophistication**
An American tourist would observe a highly organized society with clearly delineated roles, elaborate attire indicating social status, and sophisticated administrative practices. They would note the complexities of Aztec social, judicial, and bureaucratic systems, seeing parallels with modern urban governance.
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Overall, the visitor’s impression would be one of profound admiration for Aztec ingenuity, infrastructure, and vibrant culture, mingled with unease about certain unfamiliar practices and customs.
(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5716519&forum_id=2#48884267) |
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