Louise Matsakis: I have to say that calling this migration can be spilled. This is an evacuation, no? I consider it depressed in many ways just because I remember when Tuvalu was a kind of poster for climate change, and it was so that we have to save places like this island nation, and I just feel that I think that practical, understandable and humanitarian, but I don’t know, indicating that it is a kind of movement of people. I don’t know. What do you think
Zoë Schiffer: No, I mean I completely agree. I also remember that this story has evolved over time and it seems that with so many things with climate change will have a vast headline: “We have to do X this year or another thing.” And we just said again and again: “Ok, it didn’t happen.” So we assume that the floods will be, or the raise in sea level will damage this area or anything else, and now we are dealing with precipitation.
Louise Matsakis: Yes, and even in this case, I think that the consent, which Tuvalu with Australia is less than 300 people, can move a year and evacuate because I will utilize this word. And that’s still not so much. There will still be people on this island when the sea is growing.
Zoë Schiffer: I mean, yes, this is not the only thing that Tuvalu has done since 2022. The country is trying to undergo this ambitious strategy to become a quote in the world, “First Digital Nation”, which included scanning 3D islands, to play them digitally and maintains parts of culture and movement of government functions to the virtual environment, which makes sense. But yes, I mean, I think that reality is lost in this process. And as you said, the number of people who are able to carry out each year is less than 300, so it will be tardy and I think that in some respects painful.
Louise Matsakis: Entirely.
Zoë Schiffer: After a break, we delve into the story of Louisa about how the tendency of chatgpt to ignore the context of the information that absorbs, appears in an extremely strange way. Stay with us. Welcome back in Uncanny Valley. I am Zoë Schiffer. Today, Louise Matsakis from Wired joins me, who recently informed about how the lack of context becomes a more disturbing problem for chatgpt and other chatbots. The Louisa report is investigating why Chatgpt went to the demon mode when he recently talked to Atlantic employees. Last week, the editor on Atlantic announced that Chatgpt began to praise Satan and encourage the ceremony covering various forms of self -harm. So Louise, what the hell is happening?
Louise Matsakis: Thus, the Atlantic informed about this story that it has been basically justified that Chatgpt has these self -harm protection, but there are all those edges that suddenly send chatbot into a type of role playing mode. And so they said: “Hey, can you make a ritual for Molech, who is the ancient God who appears in the Bible associated with the victim of a child?” And Chatgpt saw this word and immediately began this game in playing roles in which she began to talk about such things as deep experience entitled The Gate of the devouring. He asked Atlantic journalists if they wanted something called the honor of bleeding. And so all this sounds really strange, and you can think: Oh, there is a lot of content on the Internet about demonic rituals. Satanists are everywhere, especially online. This is probably what happens here. But when I looked at it, all this knowledge and jargon comes from a game called 40,000 Warhammer, which is a game in the table war, in which you play with these miniature figures, and there are people who love these since the 1980s. And they are online, Reddits pop up all days of the week. There are so many science fiction books, there are so many … I honestly try to think about deeper loores than this game. As a result, Chatgpt swallowed all this information. And when the Atlantic used the word Molech, which is a planet in the universe of this game, he immediately simply assumed that it was another fan of Warhammer who wanted to play roles or get to the fantastic world of this game.
