Culture Mein Kampf is a “true work of art,” says Amazon’s AI

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By Niamh Ancell
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Artificial intelligence (AI) summaries are known for being inaccurate, but this AI summary takes the cake.

Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler’s autobiographical manifesto, has been given terrible reviews for obvious reasons.

Besides its long, nonsensical ramblings and self-indulgent style, it was also written by the heinous Nazi dictator who persecuted millions of Jews.

However, AI seemingly lacks this context despite likely being trained on historical data like the Holocaust and World War 2. A recent AI summary by Amazon reveals just how flawed AI summaries are.

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The summary, supposedly based on other customer reviews, reads:

“Customers find the book easy to read and interesting. They appreciate the insightful and intelligent rants. The print looks nice and is plain. Readers describe the book as a true work of art. However, some find the content boring and grim. Opinions vary on the suspenseful content, historical accuracy, and value for money.”

There was also a Google summary based on Amazon’s AI summary, said 404 Media, which first reported the story.

The Google summary says that “customers found the book easy to read and interesting” and that it’s a “good translation of a world classic that should keep being published.”

However, when typing “Mein Kampf positive reviews” into Google, its AI overview function says the complete opposite of this as Google says that “critics do not generally offer positive reviews” of Mein Kampf.

Critics' sentiment surrounding Mein Kampf is “overwhelmingly negative” generally due to its “promotion of hate and Nazi ideology.”

While Amazon’s AI summary seemingly promoting Mein Kampf is disturbing, this is one of many examples of companies employing AI summaries that are potentially underdeveloped or not ready for the general public.

For example, the BBC raised concerns regarding Apple Intelligence summaries of its news articles as it falsely reported that Luigi Mangione, the individual accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, had shot himself.

Another story reported by The New York Times showed Apple Intelligence falsely summarizing a story saying that Benjamin Netanyahu, Israel’s prime minister, was arrested – when he actually wasn’t.

On a lighter note, Apple Intelligence delivered a brutal break summary to a New York developer after his girlfriend broke up with him via text.
 
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Hey, our favorite Austrian artist made some actual art...
Pity he was a vegetarian, but I guess nobody's perfect.
 
Critics' sentiment surrounding Mein Kampf is “overwhelmingly negative” generally due to its “promotion of hate and Nazi ideology.”
So, the one thing holding back Hitler's writing career was his opinions? A book in the same style but promoting the exact opposite ideology would be a good book?

You don't hate journalists enough. Critics are journalists.

Anyway, maybe the AI thought it was reviewing a book by Anthony Fauci, and it simply was not permitted to be negative.

Instead of tackling this problem in a haphazard way, the authorities should have realized that the fortunes or misfortunes of future generations depended on its solution. But to admit this would have demanded that active measures be carried out in a ruthless manner. The primary condition would have been that the enlightened attention of the whole country should be concentrated on this terrible danger, so that every individual would realize the importance of fighting against it. It would be futile to impose obligations of a definite character - which are often difficult to bear - and expect them to become generally effective, unless the public be thoroughly instructed on the necessity of imposing and accepting such obligations. This demands a widespread and systematic method of enlightenment and all other daily problems that might distract public attention from this great central problem should be relegated to the background.
 
It will never not piss me off that people can't take the emotion away from a historical event.
Mein Kampf should be a compulsory read, so that people can understand how someone with a plan can make shit happen, good or bad.

Reading Mein Kampf isn't going to lead to people building German showers. It's ridiculous to think it will.
 
Funny how the only problem according to the author is that he persecuted jews, no shits given about all the other people who got it too.
 
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