AI doesn't know how to forgive and cannot forget

(tejassuds.com)

19 points | by tejassuds 1 hour ago

5 comments

  • summarybot 1 hour ago
    It's a very good observation. I don't know if I'd call it "forgetfulness" in the context of a current [2026 edition] LLM. They are very good at remembering almost every "thing" that passes a certain token-density threshold, until they hit saturation, and then it's a sheer rockface down to the abyss of unnatural hedging and reconfirmation of basic premises. Some sort of "forgetfulness" as described would introduce more moving parts into the "inference" stage of the running of an LLM, introducing statefulness/state-tracking.
  • josh-wrale 1 hour ago
    I believe the title is true for humanity at large, more and more over time. These things cut both ways, for both good and ill.
    • tejassuds 54 minutes ago
      There is so much weight in this one comment. I feel it now!
  • TimTheTinker 1 hour ago
    Ugh, another LLM-voice article.

    I'm getting to the point that I almost have a physical feeling of revulsion/nausea when I read something outside an open Claude Code session that is written in an AI voice.

    I'm so sick of that voice -- word choice, phrasing, style... it's hard to define and frustrating because it's both pervasive, influential on human writers including myself (I found myself using the phrase "doing a lot of work" in a Slack message about a word someone chose to use :grimace:), and presumably compounding on future LLMs.

    • Insanity 1 hour ago
      Same here. I started describing it as the “uncanny valley” of text. It’s like a gut reaction that something is off with the text even if you can’t pinpoint it immediately.
    • myrmidon 58 minutes ago
      I concur. It's interesting that this seems so difficult to get rid of; despite actively trying to overlook the taste of LLM writing, it still grates, and this does not happen to me in the same way even with communication from half-illiterate human idiots.

      It's kinda fascinating how far LLM coding/problem solving has come without making much progress on the annoyingness of their writing. Any theories?

    • matt123456789 1 hour ago
      Sounds like that word was pretty load-bearing
      • RealityVoid 1 hour ago
        It's probably doing a lot of heavy lifting.
    • quantummagic 59 minutes ago
      Not that it's an ideal solution, but you have all the tools you need to do something about it. You can put all your preferred writing style guidelines into an LLM and have it ingest and rewrite any text you dislike.
      • TimTheTinker 58 minutes ago
        That's like saying a robot will be a better friend if I use a more skin-like material for its face.

        The LLM-voice revulsion isn't just about particular idiosyncrasies. Another commenter put it well - the "uncanny valley of text".

    • tejassuds 55 minutes ago
      Fair hit, and I'm not going to try to argue you out of a gut reaction to the prose. If it read as slop to you, that's on me.

      But, I'd rather know if the claim actually held: is there a forget decay operation anywhere in the current stack, or not? That's the part I want people to hit.

      • TimTheTinker 54 minutes ago
        You LLM-generated this comment too. What about you (the human, if there is one behind this account) -- what do you think?

        If you don't speak English, write it in Hindi and use google translate. That will be much preferable to something written by an LLM.

    • alansaber 58 minutes ago
      If only there was a smoke test for this kind of thing.
  • throwa356262 1 hour ago
    No, but you can reprogram it and send it back in time to undo itself.
  • therobots927 1 hour ago
    It’s just like me fr fr
    • cedws 1 hour ago
      We are a region
    • tejassuds 1 hour ago
      fr haha except you can forgive maybe? that's the DLC the model never shipped with
      • therobots927 21 minutes ago
        That shi be bussin fr fr no cap
      • tejassuds 1 hour ago
        unless you can't, then wait, are u agi?