From 418c2b3f09ce24fa6ff8fe587def3ce004fce2db Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Marc Coquand
Date: Tue, 12 Mar 2024 10:10:38 -0600
Subject: Fix typo in curse of convenience
---
posts/curse-of-convenience.njk | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
(limited to 'posts')
diff --git a/posts/curse-of-convenience.njk b/posts/curse-of-convenience.njk
index b15291a..c209c34 100644
--- a/posts/curse-of-convenience.njk
+++ b/posts/curse-of-convenience.njk
@@ -57,7 +57,7 @@ understand? Yes, but at what cost? Even in tech literate circles, I see
people seriously arguing that since LLMs learn like a human (false),
LLMs should have the same fair use laws as us. These broken metaphors
can end up having profound impacts of our lives. Seeing LLMs as
-stochastic parrot vs sentient superhumans makes a huge difference for
+stochastic parrots vs sentient superhumans makes a huge difference for
how we want it regulated and how we interact with it.
This focus on convenience, ease-of-learning and ease-of-use, is in
many ways a great leap forward in the way we build software. These days
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