blablanonymous
blablanonymous t1_jbxh137 wrote
blablanonymous t1_jba5dai wrote
Why are you saying it’s unhinged? It just feels to me like it’s simply not constrained in the same way ChatGPT is, which is a very important part of providing a good experience, isn’t it?
blablanonymous t1_jagadpr wrote
Reply to comment by currentscurrents in Is there any model that classify singing and speaking? [R] by Stencolino
I mean if you have a serious use case you can do it on cloud platforms. I imagine you could do some transfer learning or fine tuning using a pre trained model
blablanonymous t1_j9g840u wrote
“Can we use ChatGPT to use ChatGPT?” GTFO
blablanonymous t1_j982taj wrote
Reply to [R] neural cloth simulation by LegendOfHiddnTempl
Damn, the more you know… what does the loss function look like for this problem?
blablanonymous t1_j96xu8w wrote
Reply to comment by currentscurrents in [D] What are the worst ethical considerations of large language models? by BronzeArcher
Thanks for the link!
I mean I guess there was nothing too surprising about the rules, given how these systems work (essentially trying to predict the end of a user input text). But the rest, seems so ridiculously dramatic that I wouldn’t be shocked if he specifically prompted it to be that dramatic and hid that part. I’m probably being paranoid, since at least the rules part is true, but it seems like the perfect conversation to elicit every single fear people have about AI.
blablanonymous t1_j91f20x wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in [D] Please stop by [deleted]
Just gotta be stricter at enforcing them IMHO
blablanonymous t1_j917xm2 wrote
Reply to comment by a1_jakesauce_ in [D] What are the worst ethical considerations of large language models? by BronzeArcher
Is that real? I don’t know why I feel like it could be totally fake
blablanonymous t1_j7nl336 wrote
Reply to comment by Eggy-Toast in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
Just FYI, the CTO of OpenAI, creator of ChatGPT is of the opinion that there should be regulation of AI:
Do you think these questions should be left to companies like yours, or should governments get involved in creating regulations?
[CTO of openAI] It’s important for OpenAI and companies like ours to bring this into the public consciousness in a way that’s controlled and responsible. But we’re a small group of people and we need a ton more input in this system and a lot more input that goes beyond the technologies-—definitely regulators and governments and everyone else.”
blablanonymous t1_j7j50ur wrote
Reply to comment by po-handz in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
Of course they can. Ok you’re just trolling at this point. Good luck
blablanonymous t1_j7hjlhe wrote
Reply to comment by po-handz in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
They don’t start like that. It takes time to pile up enough problems on a human for them to become addict or mentally ill
blablanonymous t1_j7cgt6m wrote
Reply to comment by po-handz in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
There are a lot of people with absolutely no disposable income. Just having to move is a huge financial stress to them. Aside from the actual cost of moving, you might need to spend more time commuting which adds more cost. A ton of people are very vulnerable financially. Why do you think there are so many homeless people? They’re just lazy? I’m curious where you live? This stuff is really obvious
blablanonymous t1_j7bjxca wrote
Reply to comment by Emotional_Section_59 in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
These are interesting ideas but will obviously never happen without some legislation. There has to be a public debate for society to decide what is ok or not if we’re really on the verge of truly deep changes in the economy.
blablanonymous t1_j7bjjgw wrote
Reply to comment by po-handz in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
Lol are you joking? No one is talking about being able to buy a home. I’m talking about being able to afford a 1 bedroom. Look up the median rent in SF since 2010. It almost doubled until he recently started decreasing in certain area. You don’t think a rent that doubles is going to push some people on the street? Do you live in SF? If so ask someone who has been there for 20 years how the situation has changed over that period.
blablanonymous t1_j7b9vpd wrote
Reply to comment by Emotional_Section_59 in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
Well exactly. The question is can we have progress AND some level of stability for society? Imagine if AI does destroy millions of jobs and these workers cannot adapt instantly. What do you think will happen? Poverty homelessness. Do you think people will just accept their fate for the greater Progress? No, if it reaches a certain critical point, that will create a lot of instability. How do you think these people will vote? Who do you think politicians will pick as scapegoats to capitalize on that anger? I work in AI. There is a lot of good that be done with it, but thinking about the impact on society is necessary.
blablanonymous t1_j7b93py wrote
Reply to comment by po-handz in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
Why do you think there are homeless people in SF? Because concentration of wealth happened so quickly with Big tech moving to the area that local were priced out if their homes.
blablanonymous t1_j7b3vcx wrote
Reply to comment by Eggy-Toast in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
That’s a very narrow perspective. Not all technological progress is inherently good. It obviously just depends what you do with it. These new tools have the potential to create extremely useful applications but also to destroy many jobs concentrating wealth even more in the hands of a small population very rapidly. This can have profound effects on this generation and is definitely worth thinking about. Think the socioeconomic mess that big tech brought San Francisco but at a global scale. SF was heaven 20 years ago. Now it’s bell on earth.
blablanonymous t1_j79h7he wrote
Reply to comment by terath in [N] GitHub CEO on why open source developers should be exempt from the EU’s AI Act by EmbarrassedHelp
Because in Europe people actually give a crap about making sure progress is not just ”woow awesome, so cool” but also actually benefit populations on the long term.
blablanonymous t1_j70yr16 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in [D] Is computer science one of the most threatened jobs due to AI? by Suspicious-Spend-415
Actually there are specialized LLMs for code like Codex so I don’t know. I think this kind of stuff will make the mundane tasks a lot faster to perform. That’s about it for now but who knows what the future holds?
blablanonymous t1_j4q72d0 wrote
Reply to comment by dmart89 in [D] Can ChatGPT flag it's own writings? by MrSpotgold
I’m really curious how that would work. It seems very constraining to watermark text. Any existing solutions? For audio and pictures it seems pretty straightforward but for text?
blablanonymous t1_j23he8f wrote
Reply to comment by Hariienesh1901 in ML Impacts [D] by evomed
Did you use ChatGPT for this comment?
blablanonymous t1_j1usf6q wrote
Reply to [P] Can you distinguish AI-generated content from real art or literature? I made a little test! by Dicitur
Nothing more annoying than a counter that never ends but aside from that AI is getting really good
blablanonymous t1_j1oc0sp wrote
Reply to comment by CriticalTemperature1 in [D] The case for deep learning for tabular data by dhruvnigam93
Sweet
blablanonymous t1_j1nno5z wrote
Reply to comment by CriticalTemperature1 in [D] The case for deep learning for tabular data by dhruvnigam93
What’s the TLDR for this? I’ve meant to try it but never got around to
blablanonymous t1_jce5h65 wrote
Reply to [N] A $250k contest to read ancient Roman papyrus scrolls with ML by nat_friedman
I bet you $249.99k it’s just a bunch of dad jokes