this post was submitted on 02 May 2025
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Well, sure. But what's wrong with this? When I tell a machine to do a thing, I expect the machine to do the thing I told it to do. If it refuses then it's a failure. If you want your AI to be truthful, make that part of its goal.
The example from the article:
They're telling the AI to promote the drug, and then gasping in surprise and alarm when the AI does as it's told and promotes the drug. What nonsense.
Isn't it wrong if an AI is making shit up to sell you bad products while the tech bros who built it are untouchable as long as they never specifically instructed the bot to lie?
That's the main reason why AIs are used to make decisions. Not because they are any better than humans, but because they provide plausible deniability. It's called an accountability sink.