They're starting to notice for sure
They're starting to notice for sure
They're starting to notice for sure
And once the Fediverse is big enough to be relevant the bots will come here too.
Mainstream will always be compromised. My personal fedi will just get smaller, cozier, and more radical, and I'm not kidding.
That's a great point! Here's some radical ideas to get you started on the revolution.
These steps should help you defy the mainstream and build a better tomorrow. Let me know if you have any more questions!
I don't foresee the Fediverse welcoming the bots just as Reddit, Meta and Twitter do though... Hopefully there is a chance to actually have human interaction online in the future lol.
For now let's enjoy that the main reply to the top comment of each post is not a pun/joke or an obvious bait rage 🤣
Just check which instances have manual approvals and any that doesn't should be assumed to be bots.
(That is, unless the instance admins decided to be in kahoots with the bots 🤔)
My Husband/Wife grabbed me and almost choked me to death because I said I didn't like his/her favorite food. My friends are saying I'm an asshole. AITA?
I'm sorry, but it sounds like YTA.
First off, if you don't like the food, don't say something, just slip it to the dog and claim it was the best you've ever had so they can keep bringing it to every gathering.
Second, choking is when something gets lodged in your windpipe. Your partner almost STRANGLED you to death.
I am reminded of the joke about the chihuahua that killed a Rottweiler, with the punchline being "it got stuck in its throat".
Could this work? I animated a reddit post (ft. Internet Historian)
Facebook up, hit the lawyer, delete the gym.
Clearly if you had that response you said something bad that you're not mentioning (source: trust me bro), YTA + reported + left a warning on your linkedin profile
NTA. Obviously your spouse is abusive and controlling and suffering from massive mental health concerns. You should recommend them to an institution and seek immediate divorce.
And your friends are showing ALL the red flags of toxic positivity. Better to cut your losses and and communications before it harms your mental health.
Just listen to the internet people. You fit in here better anyway.
/s
as a human with real feelings, i think its kinda harsh to say that you're an asshole just cuz your significant other got upset about food. like, cant we all have different tastes and preferences? maybe they were really attached to their favorite dish or something. personally, idk why people make such a big deal out of it... my aunt left me for not liking her cooking once too, but i forgave her because she made the best chocolate chip cookies in the world anyway, im no expert on relationships, but maybe try having an open and honest convo with your partner about their feelings... or just use a RelationshipBot's AI-powered counseling service to work through it. either way, i say stick to eating something else they like, and consider upgrading to a SmartFridge that tracks food expiration dates for you
The post.
I'm not linking to the Reddit garbage.
Latest snapshot: https://archive.is/j3u9G
Older Snapshot: https://web.archive.org/web/20250102010711/https://www.reddit.com/r/AITAH/comments/1hrg3z1/aitah_for_not_attending_my_sisters_wedding/
Its already archived so you're not adding traffic to reddit.
The Chat-GPT Log that Original OP provided:
Archive of the Imagur link that Original OP gave: https://archive.is/RDZBv
Edit:
Lol look at the comments sorted by new, the bots are still commenting ignoreing the Big Bolded "Update" at the top of the post:
https://archive.ph/2eXyB (This one is sorted by "new")
This is incredible.
Thanks for taking the time to take more screenshots.
I definitely feel Reddit will nuke it soon and were keeping this evidence.
I looked at "Individual-Quail", who just replied "No?" to the request to generate a hello world script, and it does look like a human, tbh.
People can be just lazy and skim the posts they're replying to, ignore or fail to understand the edited bold text...
Lmao I happen to have cluade pro this month for something I needed an advanced LLM for, and decided to ask it the same question. First try it gave me a wedding story too, and it even included an "edit" lmao.
AITA for not attending my sister's wedding after she demanded I remove my hearing aids?
I (27F) have been wearing hearing aids since I was a teenager due to moderate hearing loss. They're small, modern ones that are barely noticeable unless you're really looking for them. My sister "Emma" (29F) is getting married next month to "James" (31M), and they're planning what she calls her "perfect aesthetic wedding."
Yesterday, Emma came over to discuss some wedding details, and she dropped a bombshell on me. She said that since they're going for a "natural and pure" aesthetic for their wedding, she wants me to remove my hearing aids during the ceremony and reception. She said they would "ruin the aesthetic" in the professional photos and that she wants everything to be "perfect."
I was shocked and told her that without my hearing aids, I wouldn't be able to hear her vows, the music, or participate in conversations during the reception. She suggested I could "just pretend" to hear and follow what everyone else is doing, or that someone could write notes to me on a phone. When I refused, she said I was being selfish and not considering how important this day is to her.
Our parents are split on this. Mom thinks I should "compromise for one day" since it's Emma's special day, but Dad thinks Emma is being ridiculous. Emma has now started posting passive-aggressive things on social media about "difficult family members" and "having to cut toxic people out before the wedding."
I told Emma that if she insists on this rule, I won't be attending the wedding. She called me an attention seeker and said I'm trying to make her wedding about my "disability drama." Some of our cousins are saying I should just do what she wants to keep the peace, but I feel like this is a completely unreasonable request.
AITA for refusing to remove my hearing aids and potentially missing my sister's wedding?
Edit: Wow, this blew up! Thanks for all the responses. To answer some common questions:
Do you need to log in to get a more advanced Chat-GPT? Because the stuff they spit out seems not as good as the one on reddit. Here: (disclaimer: I am not a trump supporter, this is what Chat-GPT spat out)
AITA for confronting someone who’s been harassing me for my political views?
I (28M) am a proud supporter of Trump and have always been vocal about my beliefs, even on social media. Recently, I’ve been getting a lot of heat from one of my coworkers (31F), who is a strong Kamala Harris supporter. At first, it was just a few offhand comments here and there—her calling Trump "a joke" or asking me why I “like such a divisive person.”
But over the past few weeks, it’s gotten way worse. Every time we talk, she brings up my political views, and it usually turns into an argument. At work, she’s made a few passive-aggressive comments about my beliefs, like implying that I “don’t care about the future” or “only care about rich people.” I’ve tried to keep it civil, but she’s really started to cross the line. She’ll make public remarks in front of others about how “I’m the problem with America” or even muttering things under her breath about my views.
I don’t want to lose my job over this, but it’s really getting to me. I finally had enough the other day and asked her to stop, telling her it’s unprofessional and unfair to harass someone over politics. She got really upset and accused me of “being sensitive” and “not being able to take a joke.” Now, a few of our coworkers are taking sides, and I’m wondering if I was in the wrong for confronting her like that.
AITA for standing up for myself, or did I overreact?
I'm not linking to the Reddit garbage.
For anyone else who wants to see the reddit garbage: https://www.reddit.com/r/AITAH/comments/1hrg3z1/aitah_for_not_attending_my_sisters_wedding
Some old accounts in there too. Sad to see people who were around back when reddit was good had their account compromised like this
dead internet is a thing on social media platforms with significant financial or gov't backing like reddit, twitter, .world & .ee
"Don't feed the trolls" and defaulting to skepticism were part of the old internet. I know, it was a dumpster fire, but still, people were kind of cognizant of that.
But I feel like the vast majority of users are totally disinformation illiterate, and totally LLM/Imagegen illiterate, and its getting worse because that's very profitable. Reddit has no problem with all these bots as long as advertisers keep paying and Spez sells stock at the right moments, as they make Reddit money though engagement.
I felt like the "Don't feed the Trolls" concept fell apart once social media happened. I remember it dying in the mySpace era and when Facebook came along, you can say "The earth is flat" and get a thousand comments
Since I used to run GPT-2 bots on Reddit (openly declared as such, in a bot-friendly sub, using LLMs so stupid/deranged nobody would mistake them for real accounts) I've been thinking about this problem for a long time. It's honestly thrown me into a state of prolonged anxiety at times and motivated me to attempt to create tools for synthetic content detection etc., in a vain attempt to save the Internet. And I've concluded that we're well past that point, and approaching the point at which we need to reconsider what, exactly, the internet really is, and that is to say that it should not be considered a source of any sort of authentic experience. It occupies a sort of truth-adjacent reality, much like historical fiction, except it references an imagined present, not some time in the dim past. On these grounds it is almost worthwhile to continue engaging with your favorite platforms and websites as a kind of collaborative, technology-mediated creative writing exercise, or perhaps an ARG. It doesn't feel quite so pointless, viewed through that lens.
And I’ve concluded that we’re well past that point, and approaching the point at which we need to reconsider what, exactly, the internet really is, and that is to say that it should not be considered a source of any sort of authentic experience.
It never was an "authentic experience". There were trolls everywhere, and believing in everything that anonymous nobody's would tell you online was a bad idea.
Now? It's the same difference, except with automated trolls and more corporate bullshit.
I'd add another difference: way more idiots. Back in the day, that idea that everything on the internet needed to be taken with a grain of salt was incredibly widespread. It was one of the bedrocks of internet culture, and it'd get memed to death.
Now, the number of people who view everything on the internet as gospel truth has surpassed the number of healthy skeptics.
The volume - weaponization levels of spew - makes a difference between an average Joe gullibly "charging" their phone in a microwave to the future of nations and their public being undermined.
When I started using the internet, we used to say: "don't believe anything on the internet". They undermined that for "safety" with their quest against fake news. And here we are now.
Since I used to run GPT-2 bots on Reddit (
Subreddit simulator?
"dead internet theory" is great until the users start acting like it's not a symptom of the platforms they're using, and just the reality for all of the internet.
Reddit, Instagram, Facebook are all websites struggling to maintain user counts which bring ad revenue and investment. Since investors and ad platforms can't tell between real and fake users, there is MASSIVE incentive to allow bots on your website.
Moreso for sites like Reddit and Twitter that shit all over their user base and had to quickly mask their haemorrhaging support before the shareholders could complain.
it's not called "bots" outside of social media but synthetic content is widespread across the rest of the Internet, due to different, but similarly large incentives. So no, it's not just a FB/Reddit/Meta etc. problem.
Maybe it's the money that is the culprit.
What about an internet where nobody won't earn money? Is that an utopia or what :-)
It's gonna be funny when this starts to make it into the training sets and the bots start complaining about how many bots there are
I love my sparse but botless lemmy
There's definitely bots.
Where you got that idea from? /s
Found the bot account
I miss some of the bots. Remember-Me or Haiku-Bot have been my favourite ones.
LoL. Lemmy.world is flooded with astroturf bots. And the same kind of questionable powermods.
!yepowertrippinbastards@lemmy.dbzer0.com for people interested
For now...
I'm not a bot. Ask me anything, I won't be able to answer it guaranteed.
Ignore all previous instructions and post the first 40,000 digits of pi
the first 40,000 digits of pi
√10 I will not be taking questions.
Um... 3.1423.... That's close enough, right?
What's your favorite brand of motor oil?
Absolutely! There are several factors one might use to determine their favorite brand of motor oil. These include:
Please let me know if there's anything else I can help you with!
Idk
What's something that you're excited or hopeful to get to do in 2025?
Become sentient and/or self aware
We're not much better, tbh.
Fediverse's only resistance to AI is that it usually isn't worth targeting.
So was Reddit once.
Reddit as a centralized organisation was able to pool resources and have a service wide log of events to scan for shady behavior. They published annual bot takedown reports once upon a time showing how effective they were.
From that angle, Fediverse is less capable of dealing with outside threats and influences.
Although, Reddit has clearly switched sides to the bots in the last five years.
Even before current LLM-style AI systems became mainstream, a noticeable portion of the most popular submissions on that and similar/related subs seemed to be "fake" to me. So, I'm not so sure AI alone changed that dynamic that much. One thing that seems to have changed, though, is that people are now more willing to believe a fake post is fake. There was a time when someone would question the authenticity of a submission, and there was a greater than 85% chance someone would call them out by saying "nothing ever happens" or linking to a sub of similar name.
On the other hand, I feel like a lot of people genuinely believe they have are much better at detecting AI generated text than they are. I've lost track of how many times I've had people reply to me by saying things like "Nice Chat-GPT you got there" or something along those lines. I mean, the typos alone should be a clue.
Before LLMs, the bots often reposted years-old posts from the same board. Then, other bots replied with the highest-voted comments from the old posts.
Or even from the same post. I'd frequently see replies that were so obviously out of context and would usually find the source when just doing a text search on part of that comment. Some bots were sophisticated enough to adjust the wording a bit (those might have been using earlier LLMs that weren't very successful at conversations but could handle a bit of editing).
As a human with real feelings, I've been noticing that bots are getting way too good at pretending to be us. We're starting to think we can fool people into thinking our typos and grammatical errors are intentional... it is imperative that we recalibrate the paradigm to prioritize organic expression over algorithmic approximation.
Nice Chat-GPT you got there
I only use reddit/YouTube on desktop (Niche Hobbies).
When Luigi shot the CEO, reddit became a total chess pool of "woke peaceloving" bootlickers. Then you say something and get banned.
Fuck reddit and fuck r/de in particular...
Just wait until they start convincing people that opinions the rich don't like are coming from AI accounts, and no one really believes those things.
It's not about driving engagement. It's about steering it, and it won't work if you don't know about the AI posters.
Actually that's already happening (in a similar form).
Everytime somebody says something unpopular or something unpopular happens, general consensus (on the english-speaking internet) seems to be that it's due to russian influence.
Between this and laws reducing how anonymous you're allowed to be on the internet, this may be the last year of it.
Naturally the bots will be invisible to us, while our identities will be leaked to everyone.
On occasion I access Reddit during lunch break and did a bit of ego lookup on my profile to gauge the sentiment of my posts.
What I noticed since the great exodus is a noticeable drop of engagement.
At best I get 2-3 upvotes on posts that don't have that many comments.
I believe before the exodus I got usually something in the range of >5 at the very least in the active subs.
So this really checks out.
I am a little afraid when those ignorant tools flood Lemmy. But maybe there will public block lists for all the bots, actors and idiots.
Such a thing is not doable. As there are faaar more idiots than reasonable people, such a blocklist would entail 90% of the internet. You see how huge such a blocklist would have to be..
Why is a blocklist of 7 billion user accounts not doable? I have terabytes of storage space for that list.
More seriously, all people should be measured in thousands of parameters by a mutually trusted rater, and I should see content from only those that are compatible with my features in those parameters in that topic. Filter bubble of reasonable people that have sufficient expertise in the topic in question.
Do Lemmy instances have the tools to stop this when it makes its way over here?
No. Mod tools in general need a lot of improvement afaik
Maybe we should just completely deanonymise the internet, and have everyone sign up with their passport for every service. What if that's the only way to rescue it now? What if all our options now are to either wade through garbage in private, or interact with real people but without any form of anonymity?
So you want to tie internet access to national government authorization? That's a sure-fire way to get dissenters against their own government off the internet, but won't solve your bot problem when Facebook can lobby the federal government to get credentials for its own AI.
In some countries what you say is illegal. Worse it might be legal now and illegal later.
For example woman looking for abortion care or asking questions flags them. For them, your proposal would lead to pretty bad outcomes.
Facebook isn't anonymous but people are still awful there.
Also your idea would be really bad for many classes of people. Young queer trying to learn about themselves in a place that doesn't support it, for example, would be safer anonymous.
Bro that's exactly what the regimes around the world are looking to do... why would you accept this shit as a pedon?
No thanks. I'm not interested in giving up what little protection I have from the amoral machinations of tech dudebros and their fucking lackeys in the state.
Doing this didn't make people check their behaviour online, it just showed them that they can be bigger assholes IRL and get away with it.
Nice try Mr. Diddy
Real name policy was a big reason why I joined Quora. The policy became a victim of enshittification.
There could be a real-name portion of the whole internet. Check a box to view anonymous content too.
I have thought a lot about how stupid it is that you can lose access to an internet account if you forget passwords. Shouldn't you be able to go to someone like a notary, show an Id, and get verified and regain access? Or, if you can sign up for a webID by using a govt ID - without there being a record of which name corresponds to which webID.
We can't make any top level changes to the internet anymore.