ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »A fellow crocheter! I understand how you feel, AI has become increasingly troublesome in the crochet community. I take it you also do Amigurumi, since you mentioned soft sculpture?
SilverBride wrote: »Why would they forbid players from using AI to post? It's not illegal.
FurryCandyHearts wrote: »The problem with ai is that it will flat out lie just to give an answer
FurryCandyHearts wrote: »The problem with ai is that it will flat out lie just to give an answer
AI used to help people write their own thoughts in a clear and readable way = fine.
People feeding in a low quality prompt and then posting something that is not their own thoughts to try and generate discussion = usually makes me feel like I just wasted a few mins of my life and I'm not replying to it.
In other words: use it as a content refiner, not as a content creator.
SerafinaWaterstar wrote: »
SerafinaWaterstar wrote: »
it would be helpful if you also linked those translation tools that do not use artificial intelligence.

SilverBride wrote: »Why would they forbid players from using AI to post? It's not illegal.
Since when is "I can and should do anything I want so long as it's not illegal" been an acceptable axiom?
spartaxoxo wrote: »That's not a translation tool. It can give you a vocabulary word but it cannot tell you how to use it properly or interpret your entire sentence. Translation involves grammar too.
spartaxoxo wrote: »There's a reason that translation is one of the earliest things we did with internet tools. It takes years of study to be able to communicate effectively in a foreign language but the person who is using them may not have had that opportunity before a real need arises.
spartaxoxo wrote: »That's not a translation tool. It can give you a vocabulary word but it cannot tell you how to use it properly or interpret your entire sentence. Translation involves grammar too.
It's a tool used for translation by many people around the world for about 180 years (until internet access became mainstream). Last time I looked into one it had a big grammar section at the back of the book (not sure if all editions; I've only used a Webster's a few times, more common in my country are the Oxford English Dictionary or the English dictionary by Langenscheidt, which all include grammar - the big books, at least, not the pocket dictionaries for travel).
And these people play ESO (which is rather text-heavy and only available in a few languages) and absolutely need to discuss the game in these forums?
spartaxoxo wrote: »That's not a translation tool. It can give you a vocabulary word but it cannot tell you how to use it properly or interpret your entire sentence. Translation involves grammar too.
It's a tool used for translation by many people around the world for about 180 years (until internet access became mainstream). Last time I looked into one it had a big grammar section at the back of the book (not sure if all editions; I've only used a Webster's a few times, more common in my country are the Oxford English Dictionary or the English dictionary by Langenscheidt, which all include grammar - the big books, at least, not the pocket dictionaries for travel).spartaxoxo wrote: »There's a reason that translation is one of the earliest things we did with internet tools. It takes years of study to be able to communicate effectively in a foreign language but the person who is using them may not have had that opportunity before a real need arises.
And these people play ESO (which is rather text-heavy and only available in a few languages) and absolutely need to discuss the game in these forums?
spartaxoxo wrote: »That's not a translation tool. It can give you a vocabulary word but it cannot tell you how to use it properly or interpret your entire sentence. Translation involves grammar too.
It's a tool used for translation by many people around the world for about 180 years (until internet access became mainstream). Last time I looked into one it had a big grammar section at the back of the book (not sure if all editions; I've only used a Webster's a few times, more common in my country are the Oxford English Dictionary or the English dictionary by Langenscheidt, which all include grammar - the big books, at least, not the pocket dictionaries for travel).spartaxoxo wrote: »There's a reason that translation is one of the earliest things we did with internet tools. It takes years of study to be able to communicate effectively in a foreign language but the person who is using them may not have had that opportunity before a real need arises.
And these people play ESO (which is rather text-heavy and only available in a few languages) and absolutely need to discuss the game in these forums?
spartaxoxo wrote: »Glad that's not the case in your country but in mine you need a lot more than a dictionary. Dictionary will tell you the meaning of a word but actual translation requires more than just that.
spartaxoxo wrote: »It's not a complete tool.
Why use a dictionary if Google Translate translates your post into English within seconds?
If instead of your specific words, the text would say:OutLaw_Nynx wrote: »Ban AI. If you can’t formulate an argument without AI, your opinion is automatically dismissed. I remember a member just rapid firing responses from ChatGPT a few months ago. It was ridiculous and their arguments made no sense either.