Skip to main content
翻訳中 — お使いの言語版を準備している間、このコンテンツは英語で表示されています。

LLM Hallucinations Are Still Absolutely Nuts

Technology
United States
Started January 16, 2026

A couple months back, a grad student reached out to me to see if I could help with some research they were doing

Source Articles

Need to find a specific claim? Search all statements.
🗳️ Join the conversation
5 投票すべき主張 • Your perspective shapes the analysis
📊 Progress to Consensus Analysis Need: 7+ participants, 20+ votes, 3+ votes per statement
Participants 0/7
Statements (7+ recommended) 5/7
Total Votes 0/20
💡 Progress updates live here. Final readiness is confirmed when all three requirements are met.

Your votes count

No account needed — your votes are saved and included in the consensus analysis. Create an account to track your voting history and add statements.

CLAIM 投稿者: will Jan 16, 2026
The overemphasis on LLM hallucinations risks creating unnecessary fear and skepticism towards AI technologies that have potential benefits.

翻訳準備中

Vote options for this statement: agree, disagree, or unsure
Vote to see results
CLAIM 投稿者: will Jan 16, 2026
The phenomenon of LLM hallucinations raises important ethical questions about AI's role in decision-making processes.

翻訳準備中

Vote options for this statement: agree, disagree, or unsure
Vote to see results
CLAIM 投稿者: will Jan 16, 2026
Focusing on LLM hallucinations distracts from the broader benefits AI can bring to research and education.

翻訳準備中

Vote options for this statement: agree, disagree, or unsure
Vote to see results
CLAIM 投稿者: will Jan 16, 2026
Research on LLM hallucinations can lead to improvements in AI accuracy, ultimately enhancing its reliability in various fields.

翻訳準備中

Vote options for this statement: agree, disagree, or unsure
Vote to see results
CLAIM 投稿者: will Jan 16, 2026
LLM hallucinations highlight the urgent need for better AI safety measures to prevent misinformation and misuse.

翻訳準備中

Vote options for this statement: agree, disagree, or unsure
Vote to see results

💡 How This Works

  • Add Statements: Post claims or questions (10-500 characters)
  • Vote: Agree, Disagree, or Unsure on each statement
  • Respond: Add detailed pro/con responses with evidence
  • Consensus: After enough participation, analysis reveals opinion groups and areas of agreement

Society Speaks is open and independent. Your support keeps civic discussion free from advertising and commercial influence.

Support us