• @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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        59 months ago

        Has it? I mean, all this “AI” news is pretty annoying, but how has it impacted our daily lives? ChatGPT has only made mine better.

        • @FluffyPotato@lemm.ee
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          179 months ago

          Most search engines are practically unusable due to the massive amount of garbage AI generated sites that take up the search results while having just platantly false information.

          • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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            -159 months ago

            I haven’t used a search engine since I started using ChatGPT. It does all the heavy lifting for me.

            • @hoot@lemmy.ca
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              129 months ago

              I am concerned to think of all the terrible and just plain wrong information you have been given.

            • @FluffyPotato@lemm.ee
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              119 months ago

              The problem with using it as a search engine is that if it doesn’t know the answer it commonly makes things up. I tried using it for work but it got details wrong enough to make it useless.

              • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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                -89 months ago

                You can’t trust search engine results either. It’s just another tool that you use to arrive at a conclusion. You still have to do work.

                • @FluffyPotato@lemm.ee
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                  59 months ago

                  You could in the past. About 6 years ago or so the top 3 results were almost always correct.

                  Currently you can’t because of the AI generated content that gets things wrong the same way as using an AI as a search engine.

        • @bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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          59 months ago

          I’m pretty sure the number of people that have lost their jobs over this shitty text generator has surpassed a million.

          • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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            -49 months ago

            But that has nothing to do with ChatGPT. It’s what some people were blaming on all of the layoffs when it came out. That would have happened regardless. The news just loves a clickable headline.

            Most of these companies will start rehiring again. They just did it to trim the fat, cut the high earners, and get people back in at a lower rate because they’re desperate for work.

            Tale as old as time.

              • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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                -49 months ago

                That is not at all what I said, and you clearly didn’t read my comment. I’m not defending them. I’m saying it’s not the fault of AI. They were gonna fire them anyway to lower costs, and get cheaper workers. (A bad thing)

                Apologize, you fucking cunt.

        • _NoName_
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          49 months ago

          If we’re talking only about LLMs, then probably the biggest issues caused are threats to support line jobs, the enshittification of said help lines, blatant misinformation spread via those chat bots, and a variety of niche problems.

          If we’re spreading out to mean AI mor generally, we could talk about how facial recognition has now gotten good enough that it’s being used to identify and catalogue pretty much anyone that passes a FR-equipped security system. Israel has actually been picking civilian targets via AI. We could also talk about “self driving” cars and the compeletely avoidable deaths they’ve caused. We could talk about how most convolution network AIs that identify graphic imagery and other horrific visuals use massive sweat shops to sort said graphic images for pennies. We could also talk about how mimicry AI has now been used to create both endless revenge porn of unwilling victims, and also faked the voice of others to try to scam them or make them not vote. There’s plenty of damage AI as a whole has done, even if LLMs are the most minimal of all of them.

          • @RidcullyTheBrown@lemmy.world
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            29 months ago

            If we’re spreading out to mean AI mor generally, we could talk about how facial recognition has now gotten good enough that it’s being used to identify and catalogue pretty much anyone that passes a FR-equipped security system.

            I don’t think that this is “AI more generally” as the public (and the current article) understands it. You’re lumping together any slightly self corrective algorithm under the AI umbrella. This might be technically correct, but it’s just operations, it’s not indicative of the current hype.

            We could also talk about “self driving” cars and the compeletely avoidable deaths they’ve caused.

            The limiting factor for self driving cars is hardware, not software. There is no commercially viable video technology available to allow taking the self driving technology out of the lab and into the consumer space. Unless you’re talking about Tesla-like systems which, of course, are neither a “self-driving” system nor consumer ready.

            We could also talk about how mimicry AI has now been used to create both endless revenge porn of unwilling victims, and also faked the voice of others to try to scam them or make them not vote

            This is not AI. The technology behind the voice or image manipulation has existed for some time and has been used for fake porn and for fake voice calls for a long while. We’re only discussing about it now because they can generate traffic if they’re tied to a hype like AI. Very few people would read a story about a student sticking faces of his colleagues over naked bodies, but say the student used AI and suddenly everyone wants to find out what happened. It’s even worse: headlines are discussing the reaction of X celebrity to porn fakes in the context of AI even though porn sites have been having a fake porn section ever since the late 90s and they’re available to anyone with the mental capacity to click “I’m over 18”. Maybe you’re too young to remember, but google wasn’t always censoring search results. Before 2010-ish, fakes like these would routinely appear in google searches of a celebrity’s name. I’m not really sure why AI makes this any different

            • _NoName_
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              29 months ago

              You are pulling a no true Scotsman fallacy here. AI has always been a somewhat vague term, and it’s explicitly a buzzword in today’s systems.

              This AI front has also been taking the current form for more than a decade, but it wasn’t a public topic until now, because it was terrible up until now.

              The relevant things is that AI is automating a normally human-centric practice via extensive training on a data model. All systems I’ve mentioned utilize that machine learning practice at some point in their process.

              The statement about the deepfakes is just patently incorrect on your part. It is a trained model which takes an input, and outputs a manipulated output based on its training. That’s enough to meet the criteria. Before it was fairly difficult and almost immediately identifiable as AI manipulated. It’s now popular because it’s gotten good enough to not be immediately noticeable, done fairly easily, and is at the point where it can be mostly automated.

              • @RidcullyTheBrown@lemmy.world
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                19 months ago

                The statement about the deepfakes is just patently incorrect on your part. It is a trained model which takes an input, and outputs a manipulated output based on its training. That’s enough to meet the criteria. Before it was fairly difficult and almost immediately identifiable as AI manipulated. It’s now popular because it’s gotten good enough to not be immediately noticeable, done fairly easily, and is at the point where it can be mostly automated.

                I never claimed that the current software didn’t use machine learning. I simply said that faking video/images has been happening long before machine learning was involved in it and I completely disagree that it is harder to identify fakes now than it used to be. Maybe it wasn’t a technology that was easily available, but image manipulation is something we have been seeing for a long time. If anything, the fact that it is know public knowledge that image, voice and movie clips can be faked will help people to stop trusting them when they shouldn’t

                • _NoName_
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                  9 months ago

                  I never claimed that the current software didn’t use machine learning

                  This is not AI.

                  This is your straight statement, and your only argument was saying it was done before AI was used in it. That’s a poor argument. That’s like arguing that self driving isn’t AI because remote control car piloting existed.

                  Automated image manipulation vs having 100s of hours in Photoshop. That’s AI vs what came before. Inputting a source file and getting a manipulated file after some amount of time, vs hours of meticulous work trying to get minor details right.

                  If we want to compare oldschool manipulation vs AI Manipulation, then yes, fakes now are on par with the insane skill of some image doctoring artists - you’re just looking for different things - but it’s at an exponentially lower cost than hiring a professional. Compare AI to itself, though? It’s night and day. Early AI manipulation was atrocious. And modern AI manipulation is only going to get better. That is all due to breakthroughs in AI. imagine what the hell will happen when Sora becomes usable by anyone.

                  Machine learning has taken an originally hard thing to do and made it cheap and easy. Now, any schmuck can pump out doctored footage in an afternoon. That’s why the AI porn is big- you can pay dirt cheap and give the model photos of any random woman and it’ll make porn of them - and that fact has turned it into a much more viable business model than before, that’s currently creating massive amounts of non consensual porn fakes- exponentially more than before.

          • @tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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            -39 months ago

            A lot of what you’ve mentioned has existed for decades in some fashion. It’s just code.

            • @Passerby6497@lemmy.world
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              19 months ago

              And making these tools mass market instead of being something niche that requires actual talent to do is absolutely something to blame ChatGPT for.

    • @Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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      79 months ago

      I saw through chat GPT’s gimmic right away.

      Having said that, image generation to me was and still is magic. Not because I don’t understand it, but because I saw it as a way to get people with imagination but no skill to actually make art.

      Having said that, the reality and how it is used is different.

      • @Dimantina@lemmy.world
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        79 months ago

        I love it for asset creation and texture for games. As a programmer with 0 artistic skill it has been a god send to be able to do far higher quality UI while not bogging down my prototyping time.

        But for like truely unique art… It’s kind of a mess. Like try to get an AI to make a dwarf warrior with a Lance riding on the shoulders of an anthropomorphic cat person, who is dressed in monk robes.

        AI struggles so hard with unique scenes like that… For now…

        • @jacksilver@lemmy.world
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          39 months ago

          I think it’s amazing and terrible at the same time. It clearly produces some amazing looking things, but I’ve never been able to get it to create what I want.

  • @dezmd@lemmy.world
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    419 months ago

    Somebody woke up and realized that LLM AI is just search rebranded to get more VC funding.

    FOSS implementations need to be encouraged and supported at every turn on this, it’s almost certainly the only way forward with any reasonably open ethical consideration.

  • @Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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    209 months ago

    What a terrible article.

    TLDR: good inventions lose their novelty and become practical. AI has lost its novelty so it’s about to become great?

    Kind of skips the whole practicality aspect.

  • ugjka
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    149 months ago

    AI? You meant 1000 people in India, perhaps

  • @rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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    139 months ago

    It was a hype train for normies who wanted to become relevant in “tech” conversations without knowing shit. Like blockchain before it, and smartphone models before blockchain. And for other normies who dreamed that now that technology will finally make computers able to do what’s told in natural language, like in the movies, and engineers obsolete.

    For me it’ll become more magical, when used appropriately.

  • @Jimmyeatsausage@lemmy.world
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    89 months ago

    Kudos to the person (or, ironically, AI model) who chose that picture, though. Pepto Popsicle is the best euphemism for LLMs as AI that I can imagine.

  • @drawerair@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    I still use large-language models for fun. My fav phone reviewer is Marques Brownlee. I compared his best big phones in his phone awards to Claude 3 opus’ best big phones – I asked Opus. I wanted to see the similarities and differences for fun.

    I’ve been :) with the tight competition too. Claude 3 is making Gpt 4 and Gemini sweat.

  • @uhmbah@lemmy.ca
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    -49 months ago

    It’s not even “artificial intelligence”.

    Seriously, “artificial intelligence” suggests, (defines?) self aware.

    AI is ridiculous machine language algorithms.

    The fuck, people!!

    • @piecat@lemmy.world
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      69 months ago

      AI is ridiculous machine language algorithms.

      It always was

      What you’re thinking of is general ai. But ml is a subset of the field of ai.