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Posted

@BilletHead Curious which AI model you used?

ChatGPT answer, which is somewhat different than what you posted. 
Can you use a .410 to hunt deer in Missouri?

Yes. In Missouri, you can legally hunt deer with a .410 shotgun during the firearms deer season — but only with slugs. Buckshot is not legal for deer.

Missouri’s deer regulations specifically list:

“Shotguns (including .410) with slugs only” as an allowed method.

A few practical considerations:

  • A .410 is considered very light for deer.
  • Keep shots close — many hunters limit it to roughly 40–50 yards or less depending on the slug and gun.
  • Shot placement becomes extremely important.
  • Modern 3-inch .410 slugs from rifled barrels perform much better than older setups.

Many experienced deer hunters still prefer:

  • 20 gauge slug guns
  • 12 gauge slug guns
  • Straight-wall rifles like .350 Legend

because they provide more energy and margin for error.

If you want, I can also help with:

  • best .410 deer loads
  • effective range estimates
  • rifled vs smoothbore barrels
  • whether your specific .410 model is suitable for deer hunting.

John

Posted
28 minutes ago, ness said:

@BilletHead Curious which AI model you used?

ChatGPT answer, which is somewhat different than what you posted. 
Can you use a .410 to hunt deer in Missouri?

Yes. In Missouri, you can legally hunt deer with a .410 shotgun during the firearms deer season — but only with slugs. Buckshot is not legal for deer.

Missouri’s deer regulations specifically list:

“Shotguns (including .410) with slugs only” as an allowed method.

A few practical considerations:

  • A .410 is considered very light for deer.
  • Keep shots close — many hunters limit it to roughly 40–50 yards or less depending on the slug and gun.
  • Shot placement becomes extremely important.
  • Modern 3-inch .410 slugs from rifled barrels perform much better than older setups.

Many experienced deer hunters still prefer:

  • 20 gauge slug guns
  • 12 gauge slug guns
  • Straight-wall rifles like .350 Legend

because they provide more energy and margin for error.

If you want, I can also help with:

  • best .410 deer loads
  • effective range estimates
  • rifled vs smoothbore barrels
  • whether your specific .410 model is suitable for deer hunting.

     Microsoft copilot.    it has pretty much copied the same thing I got in my post saying it was wrong in its assessment. I wonder if one AI can learn from another AI system? 

   Dang this is really getting scary. At this point in my life, I am not hiding anything and don't plan on it. 

  Can we hide if we choose anywhere? 

     If the second coming doesn't get me before I pass, I swear AI or big brother will. 😬

"We have met the enemy and it is us",

Pogo

   If you compete with your fellow anglers, you become their competitor, If you help them you become their friend"

Lefty Kreh

    " Never display your knowledge, you only share it"

Lefty Kreh

         "Eat more bass and there will be more room for walleye to grow!"

BilletHead

    " One thing in life is for sure. If you are careful you can straddle the barbed wire fence but make one mistake and you will be hurting"

BilletHead

  P.S. "May your fences be short or hope you have long legs"

BilletHead

Posted

 

          I can see right now we are not safe 😶@fishinwrench can I borrow your tinfoil hat or will you make me one? 🤪

 

 

Today

 
What chat system am I using
 

You’re chatting with Microsoft Copilot — specifically the version built into Microsoft Edge’s sidebar, which can see your open tabs only when you allow it and use them to give context‑aware help.

A quick, clean breakdown so you know exactly what you’re using:

🧭 What this system is

  • Microsoft Copilot, created by Microsoft

  • Running inside Microsoft Edge

  • Able to reference your open tabs (like Outlook and OzarkAnglers) because you have the sidebar version open

  • Designed for research, writing, troubleshooting, and browsing assistance

🧩 What it is not

  • Not ChatGPT

  • Not a third‑party plugin

  • Not a browser extension you installed manually

🛠️ What makes this version special

  • It can understand the page you’re viewing (if you’ve granted permission)

  • It can summarize, compare, or analyze content from your tabs

  • It works with your Microsoft account and respects your privacy settings

If you want, I can also tell you what I can and can’t do, or how this version differs from the standalone Copilot website.

 
Can one AI platform learn from another AI platform?
 

Short answer: Not in the way people usually imagine. But there are a few ways AI systems can influence each other indirectly.

Let me break it down cleanly and in plain language.

 

🧠 1. Can one AI “learn” directly from another?

No. AI models like Copilot, ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, etc. cannot read each other’s internal training data, weights, or reasoning. Those are locked down by each company.

They also cannot update themselves based on conversations with another AI. Models don’t “learn on the fly” from chats.

 

🔄 2. Can one AI use another AI’s output?

Yes — but only as text, not as training.

For example:

  • You could paste ChatGPT’s answer into Copilot.

  • Copilot can analyze it, critique it, rewrite it, or expand on it.

  • But it does not learn from it permanently.

This is the same as you reading a paragraph from a book — you can respond to it, but you don’t rewrite your brain’s wiring because of it.

 

🧪 3. Can companies train future models using another AI’s output?

Yes, but only if they choose to. This is a company-level decision, not something the AI does by itself.

For example:

  • A company could generate synthetic data using one model and use it to train another.

  • This is called synthetic training data.

But again, this is done offline by engineers — not during a live chat.

 

🔐 4. Can one AI “hack” another to learn its secrets?

No. Models are isolated. They can’t:

  • Access each other’s servers

  • Read each other’s training data

  • Extract internal logic

They only see what the user types.

 

🧩 5. So what can happen between AIs?

Here are the real interactions:

  • AI-to-AI conversation (through a user acting as the bridge)

  • AI rewriting or analyzing another AI’s output

  • Companies training new models using synthetic data

  • AI systems working together in a pipeline (e.g., one summarizes, another classifies)

But none of this is “learning” in the human sense.

 

🎯 Bottom line

AI systems don’t learn from each other automatically. They can only interact through the text you give them, and any long‑term learning happens offline by the developers.

 

If you want, I can also explain:

  • How AIs could collaborate in the future

  • Whether AI-to-AI communication is dangerous

  • How synthetic training data works

  • Why models don’t learn during conversations

Just tell me which direction you want to go.

"We have met the enemy and it is us",

Pogo

   If you compete with your fellow anglers, you become their competitor, If you help them you become their friend"

Lefty Kreh

    " Never display your knowledge, you only share it"

Lefty Kreh

         "Eat more bass and there will be more room for walleye to grow!"

BilletHead

    " One thing in life is for sure. If you are careful you can straddle the barbed wire fence but make one mistake and you will be hurting"

BilletHead

  P.S. "May your fences be short or hope you have long legs"

BilletHead

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