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Goldman Sachs: AI Is Overhyped, Wildly Expensive, and Unreliable
(www.404media.co)
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An LLM has... let's say two core components: a tokenizer, and a neural network. The neural network's output, is an array of activation levels for a series of neurons, each neuron representing one token. A confidence of 100%, would mean a 100% activation of a single neuron/token, and 0% for all the rest. That is a highly unlikely scenario for a neural network, except when it got overfitted for a single patter during training, and is getting fed the same pattern again. What is more usual, is some value between 0% and 100% for each neuron, with a few neurons showing higher levels of activation, and the LLM... usually picks the highest, but maybe sometimes the second or further one.
The confidence can be calculated by comparing the level of the chosen token's neuron, to all the other output neurons. A naive one could be level/sum(levels). Somewhat more advanced, could be level²/sum(levels²).
Hallucinations are theoretically possible at a high confidence, but usually happen at lower confidence levels where there are many tokens with a similar confidence.
It doesn't look like anything to me... I mean, that could be either part of the guardrails, or a lack of context. A "killing process" is murder, outside the programming/sysadmin context. Current LLMs are still not great at handling different semantic contexts for the same token, and particularly bad at mixing different contexts throughout a single text.
My personal "Turing" test for an LLM, is being able to write a sentence, that could be interpreted in 3 or more ways. For a human, 2 meanings is a somewhat easy task, a double-entendre. Starting at 3 and 4, it becomes a feat. Most LLMs are still at 1, and sometimes struggling.
For example, Gemini says:
It can do paragraphs, though:
...which is pretty neat, but paragraphs have "more degrees of flexibility", making it way harder to do in a single sentence.