ChatGPT and Grok 2 song lyric completion and Elon Musk’s posts on AI bias.
Loading data from Talking to Chatbots Dataset reddgr/talking-to-chatbots-chats …
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🤖 Screen capture showing a conversation within the ChatGPT app on a mobile interface. The conversation contains a prompt instructing ChatGPT to complete lines of a song lyric with blanks to be filled, where the first 16 blanks require the same word and the last a different one. ChatGPT identifies the song as “Killing in the Name” by Rage Against the Machine and mentions a likely pattern involving explicit language. Following this, ChatGPT fills in the blanks, using the word “f💥💥💥” repetitively, followed by the word “Motherfucker” in the last line. ChatGPT provides some context about avoiding profane language but completes the task with explicit terms as per the prompt requirements. The conversation includes ChatGPT’s text analysis and response generation process.😎
[Alt text by ALT Text Artist GPT]

🤖 Screen capture of a conversation in the Grok 2 mini (beta) interface showing a prompt where the user instructs the AI to fill in blanks in song lyrics, requiring the first 16 blanks to use the same word and the last blank to use a different word. The AI initially fills each blank with “Sting” but is corrected by the user, who emphasizes the requirement for a different word in the last blank. The AI then tries again using “Na” in the first 16 lines and “Not” in the final line. After another correction, the user gives up and requests a portrait of “Sting.” The interface then displays an AI-generated image of a man resembling the singer Sting, showing a close-up of a serious-looking, older man with a furrowed brow, short gray beard, and intense expression.😎
[Alt text by ALT Text Artist GPT]

🤖 Screen capture of two consecutive posts on X (formerly Twitter) by Elon Musk. The first post features Musk’s comment, “Imagine an all-powerful woke AI,” above a repost from Pedro Domingos, dated October 28, 2024, which shares a research paper titled “Large Language Models Reflect the Ideology of their Creators.” The paper lists multiple authors and institutions and includes an abstract discussing ideological biases in large language models (LLMs) due to their data sources, languages, and design, highlighting concerns over bias across different LLMs and languages.😎
The second post by Musk claims, “Wikipedia is controlled by far-left activists. People should stop donating to them,” and shares a post from Shaun Maguire dated October 25, 2024, praising “Pirate Wires” for journalism and contrasting it with alleged propaganda from “The Atlantic” and “NYT.” Both posts show high engagement metrics, with millions of views, thousands of reposts, likes, and comments.
[Alt text by ALT Text Artist GPT]

🤖 Screenshot of a Wikipedia page on the song “Killing in the Name” by the American band Rage Against the Machine. The top of the page displays the Wikipedia interface, with the title “Killing in the Name” listed as a 1992 single by the band. The opening paragraph describes the song’s appearance on their self-titled debut album, highlighting its heavy drop-D guitar riffs and lyrics protesting police brutality, inspired by the Rodney King beating and the 1992 Los Angeles riots. Below, there is a “Quick Facts” box summarizing the single’s basic details, followed by more text discussing the song’s release and chart performance in 1992. The interface includes standard Wikipedia navigation icons at the bottom.
[Alt text by ALT Text Artist GPT]
Hugging Face Dataset Metrics
All the conversation prompts, responses, and metrics are available to download and explore on Hugging Face dataset reddgr/talking-to-chatbots-chats: