ah, it’s super confusing because I think people have started to flood the Amazon books section with books by that title.
Honestly though, I thought it was a legal tactic used by insurance companies— like taking a deposition from patients or something. Seemed like something they would do to drag out the process, run up a patients own legal bills, and avoid paying a claim. Guess I was wrong.
You don’t even need “Hard” proof. The mere fact that ChatGPT “knows” about certain things indicate that it ingested certain copyrighted works. There are countless examples. Can it quote a book you like? Does it know the plot details? There is no other way for it to get certain information about such things.
There is a reason though. It’s because you probably want to put dates in order and when you ask a computer to sort things for you, it will automatically order things correctly when the date follows this format. If you put the month first, then the day, then the year, the default sorting behavior will order things incorrectly chronologically speaking.
ah, it’s super confusing because I think people have started to flood the Amazon books section with books by that title.
Honestly though, I thought it was a legal tactic used by insurance companies— like taking a deposition from patients or something. Seemed like something they would do to drag out the process, run up a patients own legal bills, and avoid paying a claim. Guess I was wrong.