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423 points sohkamyung | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.585s | source
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scarmig ◴[] No.45669929[source]
If you dig into the actual report (I know, I know, how passe), you see how they get the numbers. Most of the errors are "sourcing issues": the AI assistant doesn't cite a claim, or it (shocking) cites Wikipedia instead of the BBC.

Other issues: the report doesn't even say which particular models it's querying [ETA: discovered they do list this in an appendix], aside from saying it's the consumer tier. And it leaves off Anthropic (in my experience, by far the best at this type of task), favoring Perplexity and (perplexingly) Copilot. The article also intermingles claims from the recent report and the one on research conducted a year ago, leaving out critical context that... things have changed.

This article contains significant issues.

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FooBarWidget ◴[] No.45670942[source]
I wouldn't even say BBC is a good source to cite. For foreign news, BBC is outright biased. Though I don't have any good suggestions for what an LLM should cite instead.
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dontlaugh ◴[] No.45671010[source]
The BBC has a strong right wing bias within the UK too.

There’s no such thing as unbiased.

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gadders[dead post] ◴[] No.45671027[source]
[flagged]
1. AndrewStephens ◴[] No.45671144[source]
I love how everyone seems to agree that the BBC is horribly biased but there is fierce debate as to whether it is run by the ghost of Joseph Goebbels or if the staff start each day singing The Red Flag.

Perhaps the real bias was inside us the whole time.

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2. gadders ◴[] No.45671232[source]
Yes, that would be the Centrist Dad take.
3. rsynnott ◴[] No.45671734[source]
This isn't a new issue; Saturday Night Fry (the predecessor to a Bit of Fry and Laurie) was making fun of it in the 1980s. The BBC's commitment to 'balance' has always lead it in rather weird directions.