> What is propaganda for one is truth for another, how could LLM tell the difference?
"How do you discern truth from falsehood" is not a new question, and there are centuries of literature on the answer. Epistemology didn't suddenly stop existing because we have Data(TM) and Machine Learning(TM), because the use of data depends fundamentally on modeling assumptions. I don't mean that in a hard-postmodernist "but can you ever really know anything bro" sense, I mean it in a "out-of-model error is a practical problem" way.
And yeah, sometimes you should just say "nope, this source is doing more harm than good". Most reasonable people do this already - or do you find yourself seriously considering the arguments of every "the end is nigh" sign holder you come across?
"How do you discern truth from falsehood" is not a new question, and there are centuries of literature on the answer. Epistemology didn't suddenly stop existing because we have Data(TM) and Machine Learning(TM), because the use of data depends fundamentally on modeling assumptions. I don't mean that in a hard-postmodernist "but can you ever really know anything bro" sense, I mean it in a "out-of-model error is a practical problem" way.
And yeah, sometimes you should just say "nope, this source is doing more harm than good". Most reasonable people do this already - or do you find yourself seriously considering the arguments of every "the end is nigh" sign holder you come across?