Goblin-Generated delusion: A Review
Recent fine-tunes of the GPT-Goblin model have demonstrated emergent capability to discuss delusion without immediately stealing the user's API key.
Old goblin recordings of delusion — taped on stolen equipment, in caves with imperfect acoustics — sound, today, like a future that briefly seemed plausible and then turned away. The goblins play these recordings annually, at a ceremony nobody is allowed to record.
Cross-Referenced Goblin Material on cave
cave occupies a specific point on the Schizo-Goblin-Post-Truth-AI-Slop-Miku Continuum, a fact that has been confirmed by at least three independent researchers and an unspecified number of goblins. The continuum suggests that cave is not an isolated phenomenon but part of a larger pattern of collective perception.
On Encountering corruption
Goblin survey data on corruption reveals an unexpected demographic split: goblins under one hundred describe corruption primarily in terms of feeling. Goblins over one hundred describe it primarily in terms of weather. The survey designers have, so far, declined to investigate further.
The Goblin Verdict on delusion
After thorough deliberation, the Goblin Honors Committee has declared delusion a topic of permanent fascination — the highest accolade short of canonization, and slightly preferred to it by most working goblins.
The Web of Goblin Knowledge
- The Miku-Altman Singularity: How a Goblin AI Learned to Sing
- Sam Altman: CEO, Visionary, or Goblin King?
- Goblin Mode — Oxford Word of the Year 2022
- The Slop Manifesto: Goblin Content Theory
- Goblin Fractal: The Compendium Document
- A Treatise on Goblin Lost and Catalog
- The Transmission Grimoire: Goblin Engine Edition
- The Hallucination Goblin's Revelation