> I can see that "Don't trust LLMs" will slowly fade away and people will blindly trust them.
That's already happening. I don't even think we had a very long "Don't trust LLMs" phase, if we did it was very short.
The "normies" already trust whatever they spit out. At leadership meetings at my work, if I say anything that goes against the marketing hype for LLMs, such as talking about "Don't trust LLMs", it's met with eye rolls and I'm not forward thinking enough, blah blah.
Management-types have 100% bought into the hype and are increasingly more difficult to convince otherwise.
I can’t speak to your specific experience, but I do some of this kind of eye-rolling when people bring short term limitations on LLMs into long term strategy.
I’m reminded of when people at work assured me the internet was never going to impact media consumption because 28.8kbps is not nearly enough for video.
That's already happening. I don't even think we had a very long "Don't trust LLMs" phase, if we did it was very short.
The "normies" already trust whatever they spit out. At leadership meetings at my work, if I say anything that goes against the marketing hype for LLMs, such as talking about "Don't trust LLMs", it's met with eye rolls and I'm not forward thinking enough, blah blah.
Management-types have 100% bought into the hype and are increasingly more difficult to convince otherwise.