« Reply #16 on: Saturday 07 February 26 13:26 GMT (UK) »
An 'historical society' in an area where I have some genealogical dealings, found a reference to a particular woman. They had no idea who she was, so one of their number evidently used ChatGPT or equivalent and prompted it to find a connection between the name and the locality, which it did. It contrived a match between a one-time landowner and a distant relative but caveated it that it was speculative. The caveat went out the window and they deemed this as a proclamation of the Oracle.
I did warn them this identification was highly flawed (for a number of easily verifiable reasons and also pointed to previous research that someone else had done 30 years ago) but they weren't having it and politely told me to shove it. These are adult people that should know better but they are beholden to the new AI overlords without understanding how it works and what the limitations are. I don't know if they ever did retract or caveat this identification but I've left them to it.
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