Dear #LazyWeb: What is needed to get Google to show me fun AI suggestions like adding glue to pizza sauce? How do I get the fake-#AI results?
I am not kidding. Most of my searches are on macOS (12 & 14) using Safari and occasionally other browsers (I've got 7 installed...) but I only log into my G accounts on an as-needed basis and because I use a real mail client for email, I almost never need to log in. I wipe cookies on every browser restart.
Modern #AI text generators create randomized output with no prior planning. They resist to be quality-checked by tools and processes established in the software industry.
Given this, the results are amazing. However, companies are selling the idea that these assistants will do quality checking themselves soon™.
This is mass delusion. But hey, the perks for managers/investors are worthwhile 🤷.
I think one of the biggest fears people have about AI is that it isn't perfect as assumed, but that, like us humans, it takes the given information, assumes the most likely outcome, and presents it plausibly.
Hello Mastodon, I know that a lot of you discuss the high environmental cost (such as energy use and water use) of AI and I hope that some of you could reply with authoritative publications/links regarding this problem! I want to try to convince an environmental science colleague #climatechange#AI#chatgpt#energy#technology#machinelearning#llm
I’d like to trust this story, but it fails to link to its supposed source or provide enough info to find it elsewise. A few clicks around the site makes me think that it may well be nothing but a #LLM-composed content farm. https://cosocial.ca/@kgw/112498693958537559
I'd been writing a post for #weblogpomo2024 talking about some of the more comical fuck-ups all of these #ai and #llm have been spewing. And now I'm fucking furious.
Note: content warning for depression, self-harm, and suicide
Given how many #writing contests, anthologies and magazines are currently struggling with a flood of #AI / #LLM -generated spam, have you heard about anyone trying to fight the problem by asking specifically for stories which AI cannot easily write?
Even the best models I've tried cannot easily use #solarpunk themes, symbols and structures - they always come out unnatural.
Are there any specific limitations, formats that can work similarly?
At PyCon Italia 2024 Ines Montani is presenting her talk "The AI Revolution Will Not Be Monopolized: How open-source beats economies of scale, even for LLMs" 🐍
Llama.cpp now supports the distributed inference, meaning you can use multiple computers to speed up the response time! Network is the main bottleneck, so all machines need to be hard wired, not connected through wifi. ##LLm#AI#MLhttps://github.com/ggerganov/llama.cpp/tree/master/examples/rpc
Tl;Dr AI suggested adding glue to pizza to make the cheese stick. Sourced from 11 year old reddit post.
These are all good fun to mock until someone actually gets hurt taking these responses literally.
I'm torn. I've thrown my share of shade at #LLM s and the rush to shove "AI" into everything, and even what they do well, one can argue if it's worth the cost.
In my mind, the people most likely to use "AI" for things are the ones who sort of know what they want, but don't know how to get it.
So you ask for code to do something, and the LLM spits out something glommed together from Stack Overflow posts or Reddit. How do you know it does what you wanted? How do you debug it if it doesn't work?
Reading about Ubuntu and nvidia’s LLM development collaboration, it seems like none of the features will be forced on end users via software updates. It seems like an opt-in situation, for which I’m thankful. As Microsoft and other companies are going about LLM integration wrong. Forcing users to test unsafe software is a horrible strategy.
So, I know generative AI is supposed to be just the most incorrect thing ever, but I want you to compare two descriptions. "A rock on a beach under a dark sky." And: The image shows a close-up view of a rocky, cratered surface, likely a planet or moon, with a small, irregularly shaped moon or asteroid in the foreground. The larger surface appears to be Mars, given its reddish-brown color and texture. The smaller object, which is gray and heavily cratered, is likely one of Mars' moons, possibly Phobos or Deimos. The background fades into the darkness of space. The first one is supposed to be the pure best thing that isn't AI. Right? Like, it's what we've been using for the past like 5 years. And yes, it's probably improved over those years. This is Apple's image description. It's, in my opinion, the best, most clear, and sounds like the ALT-text that it's made from, which people made BTW, and the images it was made with, which had to come from somewhere, were of very high quality, unlike Facebook and Google which just plopped anything and everything into theirs. The second was from Be My Eyes. Now, which one was more correct? Obviously, Be My Eyes. Granted, it's not always going to be, but goodness just because some image classification tech is old, doesn't mean it's better. And just because Google and Facebook call their image description bullshit AI, doesn't mean it's a large language model. Because at this point in time, Google TalkBack does not use Gemini, but uses the same thing VoiceOver has. And Facebook uses that too, just a classifier. Now, should sighted people be describing their pictures? Of course. Always. With care. And having their stupid bots use something better than "picture of cats." Because even a dumb image classifier can tell me that, and probably a bit more, lol. Cats sleeping on a blanket. Cats drinking water from a bowl. Stuff like that. But for something quick, easy, and that doesn't rely on other people, shoot yeah I'll put it through Be My Eyes. #accessibility#AI#LLM#BeMyEyes#blind
So… Big Tech is allowed to blatantly steal the work, styles and therewith the job opportunities of thousands of artists and writers without being reprimanded, but it takes similarity to the voice of a famous actor to spark public outrage about AI. 🤔
OpenAI seems to be in a bubble where they think they can do what they want without consequences. They had been trying to get Scarlet Johansson to agree to voice a ChatGPT bot for a year. She said no. They used a very similar voice anyway. Cue lawyers and weaselly backtracking. A must-read from Casey Newton. #OpenAI#LLMhttps://www.platformer.news/open-ai-scarlett-johansson-her-voice-sam-altman/