In a groundbreaking experiment, researchers created a fictitious eye disease, bixonimania, to evaluate the accuracy of AI chatbots. Many large language models accepted this non-existent condition as real, emphasizing the dangers of misinformation. Additionally, scientists found themselves referencing bogus research papers without realizing their inauthenticity, showcasing how AI learns patterns from the internet rather than confirming facts.
Trending
- “Who on Charlie’s team betrayed”: Candace Owens raises explosive questions over Ben Shapiro security updates
- ED freezes Rs 440 crore in three TMC accounts in laundering case
- Another paper leak? UGC-NET under lens
- No fruit in fruit candy, no cocoa in chocolate: FSSAI cracks down on misleading labels
- Quote of the day by Michael Schumacher: ‘You win a race, the next race it’s a question mark. Are you still the best or not?’
- Quote of the day by Fyodor Dostoevsky: ‘What is hell? I maintain that it is the suffering of being unable to love’
- ‘Holding Tehran accountable for Hormuz aggression’: US launches fresh strikes against Iran
- NFL trade rumour: Bengals, Jets eye $21M Vikings rookie as potential target
