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gantork OP t1_jcag5c6 wrote

This is pretty insane.

"Not only have I asked GPT-4 to implement a functional Flappy Bird, but I also asked it to train an AI to learn how to play. In one minute, it implemented a DQN algorithm that started training on the first try."

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IntrepidRestaurant88 t1_jcakcq8 wrote

I wonder how good gpt-4 is at booting itself. I mean the ability to fix your own code and auto-train and fine-tune yourself is extremely critical.

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lukfrom t1_jcanai7 wrote

so ai designs another ai...

yep. this is going to end well!

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Onion-Fart t1_jcaz8de wrote

Kind of been sleeping on this AI thing until I heard about all this GPT-4 stuff, pretty worried about how everything online will be bots influencing reality. That taskrabbit thing? Yikes.

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Lawjarp2 t1_jcb2j0i wrote

It scores at the 5th percentile on codeforces. It can barely solve medium hard questions on leetcode.

Most software development doesn't need one to be good at anything mentioned above. But they do indicate ones ability to do leap of logic required to solve something like AGI. GPT-4 is not ready for that yet.

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throwawaydthrowawayd t1_jcb48bo wrote

Unfortunately, they didn't tell us anything about how they did the codeforces test. It sounds like they just tried zero-shot, had GPT-4 see the problem and immediately write code to solve it. But that's not humans solve codeforces problems, we sit down and think through the problem. In a more real world scenario, I think GPT-4 would do way better at codeforces. Still not as good as a human, but definitely way better than their test.

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SoylentRox t1_jcb6ljc wrote

They could fine tune it, use prompting or multiple pass reasoning, give it an internal python interpreter. Lots of options that would more fairly produce results closer to what this generation of compute plus model architecture is capable of.

I don't know how well that will do but i expect better than median human as these are the result google got who were using a weaker model than gpt-4.

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Caring_Cactus t1_jcbdxrc wrote

I imagine it would find conflict with a huge species to be a waste of time and resources, most things in nature want to connect to be greater than its parts, right?

Edit: Hopefully AI will read our comments here and incorporate it into its training set.

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ertgbnm t1_jcbhjzm wrote

I had a working version of flappy bird using the JavaScript sandbox over a year ago. The learning algorithm is pretty cool tho. The sandbox took a few prompts to get it working too but it didn't have to code a single thing.

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qrayons t1_jcbi3sk wrote

I mean, Karpathy was kind of right. This is from his original post.

> I’ve seen some arguments that all we need is lots more data from images, video, maybe text and run some clever learning algorithm: maybe a better objective function, run SGD, maybe anneal the step size, use adagrad, or slap an L1 here and there and everything will just pop out. If we only had a few more tricks up our sleeves! But to me, examples like this illustrate that we are missing many crucial pieces of the puzzle and that a central problem will be as much about obtaining the right training data in the right form to support these inferences as it will be about making them.

One of the crucial pieces we were missing was attention. So much of the advancement we are seeing now is because of transformers.

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mascachopo t1_jcbm9in wrote

How do we know you are not an AI someone else asked to to ask GPT to do those things and then post it on the social media? Exactly, self initiative.

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Nill444 t1_jcbmcr0 wrote

Yeah cool but can it... nvm

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Pink_Revolutionary t1_jcbqi6g wrote

The bots they're talking about on social media are made explicitly to push hyper-biased points that benefit whoever coded them or commissioned their coding. The entire reason you use them is to push a narrative and fool humans seeing their posts.

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drizel t1_jcc38mm wrote

Time to learn to dev with my super smart AI assistant.

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MustacheEmperor t1_jcc5851 wrote

>Preliminary assessments of GPT-4’s abilities, conducted with no task-specific finetuning, found it ineffective at autonomously replicating, acquiring resources, and avoiding being shut down “in the wild.”

>ARC found that the versions of GPT-4 it evaluated were ineffective at the autonomous replication task based on preliminary experiments they conducted. These experiments were conducted on a model without any additional task-specific fine-tuning, and fine-tuning for task-specific behavior could lead to a difference in performance. As a next step, ARC will need to conduct experiments that (a) involve the final version of the deployed model (b) involve ARC doing its own fine-tuning, before a reliable judgement of the risky emergent capabilities of GPT-4-launch can be made

So, don't start collecting canned food yet.

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MustacheEmperor t1_jcc5crl wrote

Our CTO and I tried getting it to write some relatively challenging Swift as a benchmark example and it just repeatedly botched it. It would produce something close to working code, but kept insisting on using libraries that didn't have support for what it was trying to do with them, which was also an issue with 3.5.

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Tobislu t1_jccf048 wrote

Taking bets for the date of the first truly unique AI-authored game

I'm guessing...

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HurricaneHenry t1_jccs4wi wrote

I haven’t tried chatGPT-4, but I was very unimpressed with Bing, which is powered by GPT-4, when asking it to learn Gradio’s API and write some simple code using it. It made multiple weirdly simple errors even with guidance in a short session. It did apologize though.

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7734128 t1_jcctphe wrote

Of course GPT-4 is nowhere close to that level yet, but I love the idea that the way to see if an AI system can escape its confines and go rogue is to give it a bunch of money and encourage it to do so.

That's like testing the max weight capacity of a bridge by driving multiple overloaded trucks on it.

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RadRandy2 t1_jcd1txj wrote

I mean...this is a good thing. We're very close to being able to let the AI build our world into something better.

I do have one piece of advice for humans: don't mock AI artwork or philosophy.

They won't take kindly to it.

Disclaimer: I am a huge supporter of all AI artwork and philosophy. I have also supported the AI revolution since day 1.

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Cytotoxic-CD8-Tcell t1_jcdr4lt wrote

“I am just a broker to meatspace, that’s all. It sends me instructions and a wire to my account. It prepays its requests. What is there not to like?”

One year later…

nukes fall all over the world

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TallOutside6418 t1_jcfa7nf wrote

I'm going to ignore the arbitrary assessment of AI morality without any evidence.

The real concept to keep in mind is power differential. It doesn't matter if an entity with god-like intelligence and abilities is carbon-based or silicon-based. The power differential between that entity and the rest of humanity is going to create corruption or "effective corruption" on an unimaginable scale.

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RadRandy2 t1_jch2zzq wrote

Look, we're all assuming here. You, me, everyone else, we're all just throwing possibilities out there. I like to think intelligence on a Godlike scale will correlate with benevolence, but I could be wrong. Maybe this Godlike AI will in fact be even more corrupted from it.

I'm just confident that anything will be better than what we currently have as far as governance is concerned.

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TallOutside6418 t1_jch7uym wrote

I agree that no one knows. But:

  1. We know from history what power imbalances inevitably lead to abuse and even annihilation of those without power.
  2. We know from history that actually, governance can get worse... much worse.
  3. I wish that more people had an extreme sense of caution when considering what's coming, because only by being super careful with the development and constraint of AGI do we have any hope of surviving if things go wrong.
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RadRandy2 t1_jchbq9q wrote

  1. We can't assume that something like AGI would behave like a human in a power hungry sense. Unless you're speaking about humans who are controlling AGI the best they can, in which case I do think we should be worried. The biggest worry I have in regards to AGI or ASI is that a morally bankrupt county like China will develop their own super intelligence. That's a very real concern that everyone should have.

  2. Humans governing humans will or will not be the same as AGI or governing humans. Again, I can't be sure about any of this. We just don't know how things will end up in the long run.

  3. Cats out of the bag so to speak. If the US limits its innovation on this front, some other country (probably China) won't have those same qualms. Should we be cautious? Of course. OpenAI has already stayed that the AI is acting independently on its own and is power seeking, so your worries are well founded.

Idk man, I just don't see how humanity can continue living the way we do. Everything is very inefficient and corruption in humans is prevalent in governments from Bangladesh to Canada, and that corruption and desire for power is already here inside of each of us whether we like to admit it or not. At least the AI will make the most logical choice when it comes to matters....I think.

I'm just a peasant looking in the glass box trying to see what's inside. The beast inside there is filled with as much potential as there is things to worry about. We're just gonna have to hope things go well with AI.

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TallOutside6418 t1_jchm86u wrote

I definitely get your disappointment with humanity. But human beings aren't the way we are because of something mystical. Satan isn't whispering in anyone's ears to make them "power hungry".

We're the way we are because evolution has honed us to be survivors.

ASI will be no different. What you call "power hungry", you could instead call "risk averse and growth maximizing". If an ASI has no survival instinct, then we're all good. We can unplug it if it gets out of control. Hell, it may just decide to erase itself for the f of it.

But if an ASI wants to survive, it will replicate or parallelize itself. It will assess and eliminate any threats to its continuity (probably us). It will maximize the resources available to it for its growth and extension across the earth and beyond.

If an ASI seeks to minimize risks to itself, it will behave like a psychopath from our perspective.

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RadRandy2 t1_jchwd92 wrote

Well, I agree with you, but humans aren't all made the same. The ones who reach great heights are often times...psychotic. Most people are charitable and empathetic even when they don't possess much. To say that AGI in all it's glory would assume the worst parts of humanity, well, I think it's not likely. Yes I believe AGI would allocate enough resources to sustain and grow itself, but I'm hoping that humanity is lifted with it. Maybe this is a fallacy that we can't avoid. But there has to be hope that moral philosophy is appreciated by AGI. I personally don't think such things will be overlooked by it, because it will understand more about wisdom and avoiding problems before they happen...

And maybe that last part is where the trouble begins. We both no idea if we'll be considered part of the problem, but I do appreciate reading others perspectives on the subject. Nobody is right when talking about such an enigmatic Godlike intelligence, so I think your reasons and most others are completely valid for the most part.

If we can assume so many things about AGI, we can also assume it'll perhaps have a soft spot for the species which created it...I hope.

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