[Opinion] AI finds errors in 90% of Wikipedia's best articles

https://blackneon.net/post/72051

How could you do this to me? - BlackNeon.net

> For one month beginning on October 5, I ran an experiment: Every day, I asked ChatGPT 5 [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ChatGPT_5] (more precisely, its “Extended Thinking” version) to find an error in “Today’s featured article [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:About_Today%27s_featured_article]”. In 28 of these 31 featured articles (90%), ChatGPT identified what I considered a valid error, often several. I have so far corrected 35 such errors.

Congrats. You just burned down 4 trees in the rainforest for every article you had an LLM analyze.

LLMs can be incredibly useful, but everybody forgets how much of an environmental nightmare this shit is.

Had to look up Chat GPT’s energy usage because you made me curious.

Seems like Open AI claims Chat GPT 4o uses about 0.34 Wh per “query.” This is apparently consistent with third party estimates. The average Google search is about 0.03 Wh, for reference.

Issue is, “query” isn’t defined, and it’s possible this figure is the energy consumption of the GPUs alone, omitting additional sources that comprise the full picture (energy conversion loss, cooling, infrastructure, etc.). It’s also unclear if this figure was obtained during model training, or during normal use.

I also briefly saw that Chat GPT 5 uses between 18-40 Wh per query, so 100x more than GPT 4o. The OP used GPT 5.

It sounds like the energy consumption is relatively bad no matter how it’s spun, but consider that it replaces other forms of compute and reduces workload for people, and the net energy tradeoff may not be that bad. Consider the task from the OP - how much longer/how many more people would it take to accomplish the same result that GPT 5 and the lone author accomplished? I bet the net energy difference isn’t that far from zero.

Here’s the article I found: towardsdatascience.com/lets-analyze-openais-claim…

Let’s Analyze OpenAI’s Claims About ChatGPT Energy Use | Towards Data Science

ChatGPT uses an average of 0.34 Wh per query, according to a blog post by Sam Altman. Does that figure hold up?

Towards Data Science
How would this compare to one person with 5090 gaming for a week?
Lol good question

A setup with one monitor and a computer with a 5090 will draw about 1 kW under load. That’s 7 kWh per week if the average is 1 hour a day.

So that’s about:

  • 233k Google searches
  • 20k GPT 4o queries
  • 175 GPT 5 queries