Facebook has a feature where it has an LLM suggest comments users could make in response to a post.
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Facebook has a feature where it has an LLM suggest comments users could make in response to a post. This feature is being rolled out selectively (since sticking my head in there, I don't see it.)
The existence of this feature goes some way to explain the vast number of pithy, yet varied comments AI slop images manage to get. No one even needs to type "God Bless!
" to those fake images of homeless vets on their birthday (why does this never trend?)
Just click one of the response options.
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Facebook has a feature where it has an LLM suggest comments users could make in response to a post. This feature is being rolled out selectively (since sticking my head in there, I don't see it.)
The existence of this feature goes some way to explain the vast number of pithy, yet varied comments AI slop images manage to get. No one even needs to type "God Bless!
" to those fake images of homeless vets on their birthday (why does this never trend?)
Just click one of the response options.
@futurebird I wonder if / how much they value such responses on the back end. If likes are considered less engagement then a comment for algorthmic ranking, where does this end up? It's the user engagment of a like, but does it rank better? Guess it doesn't really matter when it all becomes bots making content for bots.
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Facebook has a feature where it has an LLM suggest comments users could make in response to a post. This feature is being rolled out selectively (since sticking my head in there, I don't see it.)
The existence of this feature goes some way to explain the vast number of pithy, yet varied comments AI slop images manage to get. No one even needs to type "God Bless!
" to those fake images of homeless vets on their birthday (why does this never trend?)
Just click one of the response options.
@futurebird Interesting - I assumed everyone had this “feature”. I can confirm the questions/comments are very dumb. For example if it is a video of a cat playing with a ball of yarn, the prompts will be stuff like “Why do cats like yarn?” Or “What is yarn?”
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F myrmepropagandist shared this topic
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@futurebird Interesting - I assumed everyone had this “feature”. I can confirm the questions/comments are very dumb. For example if it is a video of a cat playing with a ball of yarn, the prompts will be stuff like “Why do cats like yarn?” Or “What is yarn?”
“what is yarn?” once started an argument on a fiber arts forum I like that is still raging to this day- but I know facebook has nothing as interesting as that in mind—
and yet!
What *is* yarn??? 🧶