Diamond market
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
A lot of comments here are suspicious of you, so I'm going to try my hand at guessing whether this was AI.
Since GPTs are hilariously bad at detecting themselves, I'll venture on the human spirit!
First, we establish truth 1: this is copy-pasted.
Although Moissanite isn't mentioned twice, everything after "Synthetic Alexandrite" inclusively is mentioned twice. That means this was procedurally copy-pasted. Someone writing on their own would either CTRL+A then CTRL+C and make no mistakes, or not repeat themself at all.
Of course, we can also look at the half-formalized format that indicates something was copied from raw text and pasted into markdown, rather than formatted with markdown first.
Colon:
words words Colon:
words words Colon:copy-paster spotted
Second, we cast doubt that a human wrote the source.
- AI-isms vs. non AI-isms
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Non-reused acronym definitions.
Garnets like... yttrium iron garnet (YIG)
This is probably taken straight from the Wikipedia's site description for YIG. Usually humans don't define an acronym only to never use it, unless they're making a mistake, especially not for just making repeated structure. So either Wikipedia was in the training corpus or this was Googled.
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5/23 sentences start with "While" (weak ai indicator)
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no three-em dashes or obvious tricolons are overused (non ai-indicator)
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no filler bullshit introduction or conclusion (non ai-indicator)
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obvious repeated structure that you can feel (strong ai indicator)
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Suspiciously uncreative descriptions (ai indicator)
"These stones are not just rare but impossible to find naturally, offering a unique and unconventional aesthetic perfect for someone looking to stand out." (emphasis added)
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Repetition of "unusual" and "rare" rather than more flavorful or useful adjectives (AI indicator)
- We're talking synthetic stuff. Would a human write about rarity?
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Superficial, neutral-positive voice despite length and possible source. If this was pasted from a technical blog, I'd expect it to have more "I" and personal experiences, or more deep anecdotal flavor (AI indicator)
- e.g. use of "fascinating" but doesn't go deeper into any positivities
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Third... let's take a guess
So it was copy-pasted from somewhere, but I can't imagine it being from a blog or website, and it isn't directly from Wikipedia. It has some nonhuman mistakes, but is otherwise grammatical, neutral-positive, and repetitively structured. And it lacks that deeper flavor. So.... it was an AI, but likely not openAI.
At least there aren't any very "committal" facts, so the length but lack of depth suggests that everything's maaaaaaybe true...
I wasted my time typing this
- AI-isms vs. non AI-isms
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I'm not even sure where the need for an expensive gem stone came from, diamond or otherwise.
My wedding/engagement ring came from an artist and the bands are sculpted and fit together. It's beautiful and I never have to worry about the stone falling out of the setting, plus it was in our price range. Gem stones can be nice, not arguing against them, but rings without them can be just as pretty and more affordable.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
no worries about exploitation
Until De Beers starts synthesizing it.
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Isn't it both shape and material? The refractive index of the material is important in determining how much the light bends at the interface.
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Moissanite has a marginally higher index of refraction than diamond so the "ideal" cutting geometry would be different. This looks like a misleading demonstration intended to market something. They appear nearly identical in normal conditions
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
It was a marketing campaign from De Beers. Where else would it have come from.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Says the guy who just had his feeling of superiority threatened.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
I enjoyed your analysis, and appreciate the time you spent on it!
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Imagine thinking normal people don't have hobbies and then acting superior about it on the Internet...
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Yeah what conditions are these scientists working under?
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Same with vehicles
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Me too, just researching gave me so many ideas, even if I never plan to buy one. They're so pretty. Check out the quartz
Some of these vendor sites are crazy expensive but with a little more digging I bet I could find high quality, big beefy stones for under a hundo
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Moissanite is so pretty. I'm not much of a jewelry guy. And I'm not trans. But I've always wanted to wear lots of pretty sparkly things. I'm having a blast looking through all these fun possibilities. When I was in Atlanta a pedestrian walked by me wearing all white, and dripping in silver chains, he looked like a time traveler, I want to do that but with purple or green. Do you remember where you got your engagement ring stone?
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My brain; "120 years? So the mid 1800s right?....."
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
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psychonovareplied to Dharma Curious (he/him) last edited by
i mean my partner just proposed to me recently using a ring pop
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That's what I was immediately thinking.
Getting pretty colors out of a clear crystal is more about how it was cut, than what it's made of.
Unless it's something like opal that produces lightshows through completely different optical effects.
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Yes, but a clear crystal is a clear crystal.
If you want to split light you can do what regardless of refractive index (as long as it isn't zero), you'd just need to cut different angles and/or project the light onto a surface that's closer/farther to get the same effect using a different material.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Use to work opposite a De Beers building that had a helipad on the roof. Choppers were always flying in and out.
Thought it was the CEO coming and going by heli, but turns out they were for diamond shipments. Safer to transport them by air than on the road.
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Considering more than 50% of marriages end in divorce, maybe a worthless symbol is fitting.