A: Aren't we afraid that chatGPT ccFound will lose its meaning?
ChatGPT as a threat to ccFound is being asked about in various places (I recommend using the search engine). That's why we implemented GPT to automatically answer questions and you can judge for yourself how well it does in discussions with users on the portal. Sometimes we even make memes out of it.
Nobody talks about it, so listen to me carefully: GPT will never have the full human experience. GPT is an aggregator of sentiments previously expressed and expressed by Internet users. Experiences not expressed by people online are not in the GPT database, and the GPT itself has no eyes, touch, taste, and other sensory or extrasensory experiences. He also has no preferences of his own, although he can fake them (but then they are not credible), nor feelings, although he can simulate them (and they are not credible and authentic either, but only programmable). So there will always be lots of questions about real people's experiences and opinions, especially those related to new things that the GPT won't be able to reliably answer, which we'll expect real people to answer.
Besides, we need to see in the long term whether GPT will demotivate people to post anything online. Because, by analogy, GPT can make recording videos on YT pointless. After all, you can ask GPT about anything. And yet you watch videos on YT. What for? However, do you have a need to associate with different personalities? Or maybe getting to know different perspectives on a given topic? Or are you just watching entertainment there?
For some reason, GPT still hasn't replaced the human. And if it does, we'll wake up to a whole new economy anyway, and we can only guess what all the publicists will do. You know what happens to GPT then - it stops having material to feed on, so we're back to square one, that humans are needed again. What will people do? They will begin to paywall their content so that GPT cannot access it. Perhaps we will have closed newsletters and access groups for personalities (analysts, teachers or actors) with whom we want to have contact. We return to the starting point.
It can all be summed up by putting the matter on the knife's edge: will a GPT chat doll replace your wife? Many men will say "yes" in the moment of elation. But really, we all know there's going to be a market for it, but not generally. And I don't need to write three paragraphs about it.
ChatGPT as a threat to ccFound is being asked about in various places (I recommend using the search engine). That's why we implemented GPT to automatically answer questions and you can judge for yourself how well it does in discussions with users on the portal. Sometimes we even make memes out of it.
Nobody talks about it, so listen to me carefully: GPT will never have the full human experience. GPT is an aggregator of sentiments previously expressed and expressed by Internet users. Experiences not expressed by people online are not in the GPT database, and the GPT itself has no eyes, touch, taste, and other sensory or extrasensory experiences. He also has no preferences of his own, although he can fake them (but then they are not credible), nor feelings, although he can simulate them (and they are not credible and authentic either, but only programmable). So there will always be lots of questions about real people's experiences and opinions, especially those related to new things that the GPT won't be able to reliably answer, which we'll expect real people to answer.
Besides, we need to see in the long term whether GPT will demotivate people to post anything online. Because, by analogy, GPT can make recording videos on YT pointless. After all, you can ask GPT about anything. And yet you watch videos on YT. What for? However, do you have a need to associate with different personalities? Or maybe getting to know different perspectives on a given topic? Or are you just watching entertainment there?
For some reason, GPT still hasn't replaced the human. And if it does, we'll wake up to a whole new economy anyway, and we can only guess what all the publicists will do. You know what happens to GPT then - it stops having material to feed on, so we're back to square one, that humans are needed again. What will people do? They will begin to paywall their content so that GPT cannot access it. Perhaps we will have closed newsletters and access groups for personalities (analysts, teachers or actors) with whom we want to have contact. We return to the starting point.
It can all be summed up by putting the matter on the knife's edge: will a GPT chat doll replace your wife? Many men will say "yes" in the moment of elation. But really, we all know there's going to be a market for it, but not generally. And I don't need to write three paragraphs about it.
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