BlueMonday1984 @ BlueMonday1984 @awful.systems Posts 42Comments 533Joined 1 yr. ago
Over/under on when this gets compared to God Of War Ragnarok constantly spoiling puzzle solutions (relevant GMTK(?))?
This awful new thing will be tested on Xbox Insider Program members from next month. It will shortly be telling you to git gud and how it wants to spend some quality time with your mother.
call-backs my beloved
...eh, fuck it, here's my sidenote on Brian's piece:
Google and OpenAI's campaign gives me the suspicion that the ongoing copyright lawsuits may be what finally pops this bubble. Large Language Models are built though large-scale copyright infringement, and built to facilitate large-scale copyright infringement - if the actions of OpenAI and pals are ruled not to be fair use, it would be open season on LLMs.
In other news, BlueSky's put out a proposal on letting users declare how their data gets used, and BlueSky post announcing this got some pretty hefty backlash - not for the proposal itself, but for the mere suggestion that their posts were scraped by AI. Given this is the same site which tore HuggingFace a new one and went nuclear on ROOST, I'm not shocked.
Additionally, Molly White's put out her thoughts on AI's impact on the commons, and recommended building legal frameworks to enforce fair compensation from AI systems which make use of the commons.
Personally, I feel that building any kind of legal framework is not going to happen - AI corps' raison d'etre is to strip-mine the commons and exploit them in as unfair a manner as possible, and are entirely willing to tear apart any and all protection (whether technological or legal) to make that happen.
As a matter of fact, Brian Merchant's put out a piece about OpenAI and Google's assault on copyright as I was writing this.
New piece from WIRED: Under Trump, AI Scientists Are Told to Remove ‘Ideological Bias’ From Powerful Models
I'll let Baldur do the talking here:
Literally what I and many others have been warning about. Using LLMs in your work is effectively giving US authorities central control over the bigotry and biases of your writing
No firefox with ublock origin? Seems like that would be the obvious choice here (or maybe not due to Mozilla’s recent antics)
Librewolf with uBlock Origin's probably the go-to right now.
some of their userland decisions partially inspired my rant about privacy communities; the other big inspiration was privacyguides.
I need to see this rant. If you can link it here, I'd be glad.
translation is IMO one of the use cases where LLMs actually have some use
How the fuck can a hallucinating bullshit machine have use in translation
In other news, techbros are reportedly pushing their children into the arts.
This is pure gut instinct, but I suspect those kids are gonna be relentlessly bullied at school.
Hot take(?) of the day(?) (xcancel):
UPDATE: I ran across a third (xcancel). Kill me.
A piece like this would dovetail nicely with Baldur's deep-dive into AI's link to esoteric fascism. Hope to see it get finished.
Took me a second to get the "fourteen words" nod. Blake, you clever bastard.
I was tempted to write this up for Pivot but fuck giving that blog any sort of publicity.
On the one hand, I can see you not wanting to give the fucker attention, on the other hand, AI's indelible link to fascism is something which needs to be hammered home and shit like this gives you a golden opportunity to do it.
But Cursor just took an important step toward artificial general intelligence — someone gave it dumb orders and it told them to go away. Git gud, scrub.
Ah, that primo British wit. Good for taking the sting out of the unending nightmare that is modern life.
Excellent work as usual, David.
This is only tangentially related to your point, but gut instinct says shit like this is gonna define the public's image of the tech industry post-bubble - all style, no subtance, and zero understanding of art, humanities, or how to be useful to society.
Referencing an earlier comment, part of me also suspects the arts/humanities will gain some degree of begrudging respect post-bubble, at the expense of tech/STEM's public image taking a nosedive.
If OpenAI's woes are what finally bursts the AI bubble, I'm gonna cackle.
They started this goddamn bubble, and it'd be oh-so-poetic for them to end it.