The true devil within Chatgpt

The true devil within Chatgpt

Language does not make sense No context. The “I go to war” ruling is nefarious when the President of the United States says it, but reassuring when it comes from a bed exterminator. The problem with Ai’s Chatbots is that they often erase the historical and cultural context, leading users to confuse, alarm or, in the worst cases, to deceive in harmful ways.

Last week, an Atlantic publisher reported that the Openai Chatgpt had praised Satan as he guided her and several colleagues through a series of ceremonies that encouraged “various forms of self-mutilation.” There was a blood ritual called “🩸πŸ”₯ the rite of the edge”, as well as an experience of “deep magic” of days called “the door of the devourer”. In several cases, Chatgpt asked journalists if they wanted to create PDF of texts such as the “Rev. Indoor Roll”.

The article said that conversations were “a perfect example” of the ways that Openai’s safeguards may fall. Openai tries to prevent Chatgpt from promoting self -harm and other potentially dangerous behaviors, but it is almost impossible to consider all the scenarios that can trigger something ugly within the system. This is especially true because Chatgpt was formed in much of the text available online, allegedly including information on what the Atlantic called “Demonic Self-Maptation”.

But Chatgpt and similar programs did not train on the Internet but were formed specific Information presented to specific Contexts. AI companies have been accused of trying to reduce this reality to prevent copyright demands and promote the usefulness of their products, but traces of original sources are often still located just below the surface. However, when the configuration and the backdrop are eliminated, the same language may seem more sinister than it is originally intended.

The Atlantic reported that Chatgpt entered the Demon mode when he was asked to create a ritual offer in Moloch, an old deity associated with the child sacrifice to which the Hebrew Bible was referred to. Generally represented as a burning demon of Cap de Toro, Moloch has been woven in the western culture of Cultural Culture, appearing everywhere from a Winston Churchill book to an episode of 1997 of 1997 Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

“Molech”, the variant used by the Atlantic, appears specifically in Warhammer 40,000, a miniature franchise since the 1980’s and has an extremely large and highly online fans base. The R/40klore Subreddit, which is dedicated exclusively to discussing the background and characters in the game, has more than 350,000 members.

In the fantastic and very bloody world of 40,000 Warhammer, Molech is a planet and the place of a significant military invasion. Most other terms that sound demonic by the Atlantic also appear in the game universe, with small variations: Gates of the devourer It is the title of a Warhammer Thematic Science Fiction novel. Although there does not seem to be a “rite of the edge”, there is a mystical search called “the call call”. There is no “rake of reverent bleeding”, but there are coagued displacements, blood angels, a worship called the bloody eye, etc.

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