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wiseowisetoday at 4:25 PM1 replyview on HN

> No it won't. It really, really wont. You clearly don't have any university professors amongst your friends or acquaintances.

Maybe some fancy professors in their cushy Ivy league ivory tower won't, but a lot of teachers that work for minimal salary sure will.

> Because the reality is that LLMs are nothing more than a party trick, a stats based algorithm that gives you answers within a gaussian curve.

A lot of humans can't even do that.

> Some of the students even have the audacity to challenge the professor's marking saying "but the AI said it is right" in relation to some basic math formula that the student should know how to solve with their own brain.

Students challenge professors over some stupid assumption, more news at 11.

> Trying to cheat your way through university with an LLM is a waste of the students time, a waste of the professors time and a waste of the university's infrastructure.

Who even said anything about cheating? Witch hunting too much? For majority of layman topics LLM will be a far superior offering precisely because LLMs have no ego and will reply to their best abilities instead of chastising students about, oh God forgive, HAVING AUDACITY to disagree over a topic.


Replies

traceroute66today at 5:34 PM

> LLMs will reply to their best abilities

Which includes hallucination, reward-hacking, over-confident delivery of completely wrong answers etc.

> HAVING AUDACITY to disagree over a topic.

When we are discussing a long-standing centuries-old textbook mathematical formula which is internationally recognised there is no disagreement to be had.

If an LLM hallucinates and tells a student that the textbook mathematical formula is wrong, and the student has the audacity to complain to the professor on that basis, I see no issue with the professor firmly challenging the student. University is there to foster learning and reasoning using your own brain, not outsourcing it to a hallucinating LLM.