On Fri, Dec 23, 2022 at 1:04 PM Paulo Santos Perneta <
[email protected]> wrote:

> I've been playing with it on over the last week, and my experience is that
> that AI is incredibly prone to invent informations that look credible,
> while being entirely made up by it. It would generate inexistent persons,
> dates, events and places, and build an entire story out of them that,
> nevertheless, looks credible.
>

Indeed; here is another example, after prompting to write an article about
the song "Tomorrow Belongs to Me", which was written in 1966 for the
Broadway musical "Cabaret". ChatGPT attributes it, entirely fictionally, to
a real 1920s German lyricist.

"Tomorrow Belongs to Me" is a song that has been used in a variety of
media, including film, television, and theater. The song is known for its
nationalist and anti-Semitic lyrics, which have made it controversial and a
subject of debate.

The song was originally written by the German composer and lyricist Hans
Leip in the 1920s. It was later adopted by the National Socialist German
Workers' Party (Nazi Party) as a propaganda song, and was performed at
party rallies and events.

In the United States, "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" was popularized by its use
in the film "Cabaret," which was released in 1972. In the film, the song is
sung by a young man at a Nazi rally, and is later performed by the
character of Sally Bowles, played by Liza Minnelli. The song has since been
used in a number of other films, television shows, and stage productions,
often as a means of referencing the Nazi party or the Holocaust.
Despite its widespread use, "Tomorrow Belongs to Me" has been criticized
for its nationalist and anti-Semitic themes, and some have called for it to
be banned or censored. The song has also been the subject of legal
disputes, with some arguing that its use in certain contexts may infringe
on copyright laws or be considered hate speech.
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