Depends on what your understanding of the product is.
If someone sold you a "Solved all your problems" machine, and it suddenly doesn't solve all your problems, then probably no, you shouldn't pay.
But the way I'm being sold LLMs, is basically "A text generator that gives your plausible-sounding human text that sometimes hallucinates and gets things wrong, based on your input", then regardless of what the outcome is, I still made use of the "Input > Output" part, which is what I bought into, so I should still pay for that.
Now of course bunch of people will say they been sold the former, but the companies themselves seem to be selling the latter. That's my perspective from a person who doesn't follow "influencers" and what not though, which seem to be selling the public on the former rather than the latter.
The marketing materials are very much the former though. From claude.com:
> If you can dream it, Claude can help you do it. Claude can process large amounts of information, brainstorm ideas, generate text and code, help you understand subjects, coach you through difficult situations, simplify your busywork so you can focus on what matters most, and so much more.
What marketing copy have you read for LLMs that is like you mentioned?
> But the way I'm being sold LLMs, is basically "A text generator that gives your plausible-sounding human text that sometimes hallucinates and gets things wrong, based on your input"
They are selling the former to investors, while selling the latter to us.
Let's pretend I am someone who has heard people talk about ChatGPT, but have on idea what it actually is. I go to the website and am not presented with any information, just a prompt. So I ask it what it is and what it can do for me.
My ask:
> In a couple sentences, explain to me the product I'm being sold with ChatGPT. What does it do for me?
The Reply from ChatGPT:
> ChatGPT is a conversational AI that helps you think, create, learn, analyze, and get things done faster. You can use it to answer questions, draft and edit writing, summarize information, brainstorm ideas, learn new topics, write code, plan projects, and increasingly act as an assistant that can search for information, work with documents, generate images, and help complete tasks.
> In simple terms: you're buying access to an AI that turns natural language into useful work—saving time, expanding your capabilities, and giving you an always-available collaborator for both everyday tasks and specialized knowledge work.
This sounds much more like the former, a "solve all your problems" machine.... not a plausible-sounding text generation machine.
Only two weeks ago Sam Altman said their new data center "could" be where cancer gets cured[0]. It is only the people who deeply understand AI who see it as a text generator of plausible-sounding text. That isn't what the marketing department, the CEO, or the product itself seem to be saying. I'm using OpenAI as the example here, but the others don't seem much different.
[0] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9-tOtbDDrJA