• VampirePenguin@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    Gen AI and the people behind it are profoundly anti-human. They want everyone dead, diminished, obsolete, and defeated. Refuse AI features anywhere and everywhere they are placed.

  • quick_snail@feddit.nl
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    8 hours ago

    Cottom cuts to the heart of an issue that both AI doomers and AI boosters seem to take for granted: that an AI-dominated future isn’t inevitable.

    Given the development plateau tech companies seem to be running into these days, a future built on large language models (LLMs) is far from a lock. (Consider, for example, the fact that after a very recent December update, ChatGPT couldn’t even generate an accurate alphabet poster for preschoolers.)

    Cottom points to the historical record — for example, the fact that chattel slavery was at one time seen as a preordained fact of life, a myth spread by the wealthiest members of that bygone age.

    I like this comparison

    • FlashMobOfOne@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      ChatGPT couldn’t even generate an accurate alphabet poster for preschoolers.)

      And it’s already trained on the whole of human knowledge. That’s what gets me about LLM’s. If it’s already trained on the entirety of human knowledge, and still can’t accurately complete these basic tasks, how do these companies intend to fulfill their extravagant promises?

      • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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        7 hours ago

        It’s trained on human writing, not knowledge. It has no actual understanding of meaning or logical connections, just an impressive store of knowledge about language patterns and phrases that occur in the context of the prompt and the rest of the answer. It’s very good at sounding human, and that’s one hell of an achievement.

        But its lack of actual knowledge becomes apparent in things like the alphabet poster example or a history professor asking a simple question and getting a complicated answer that sounds like a student trying to seem like they read the books in question but misses the one-sentence-answer that someone who actually knows the books would give. Source, the example I cited being about a third into the actual article

        If the best it can do is sound like a student trying to bullshit their way through, then that’s probably the most accurate description: It has been trained to sound knowledgeable, but it’s actually just a really good bullshitter.

        Again, don’t get me wrong, as a language processing and generation tool, I think it’s an amazing demonstration of what is possible now. I just don’t like seeing people ascribe any technical understanding to a hyperintelligent parrot.

        • Almacca@aussie.zone
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          30 minutes ago

          It has been trained to sound knowledgeable, but it’s actually just a really good bullshitter.

          So just like their creators.

  • -RJ-@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    Hahaha. The wealthy are using THEIR WEALTH to seize control of everything. Always have, always will.

  • aramis87@fedia.io
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    13 hours ago

    “The point of AI is to permit the wealthy to access the benefits of the talented, while preventing the talented from accessing the benefits of wealth.” [Paraphrased, I didn’t remember who originally said it.]

      • Ænima@lemmy.zip
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        2 hours ago

        AI accelerated it, is all. The wealthy will kill as many people as they can should they ever develop the means to live forever, which is their end goal: immortality. Their healthcare (having money to go wherever and pay whatever) is preventative while everyone else’s is reactionary, and only if some middleman is onboard with the doctor’s medical prognosis. Only those able to serve them with their labor are desirable. Everyone not useful to them should go off and die. This is why they fight healthcare for all so hard.

        • Almacca@aussie.zone
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          28 minutes ago

          Aren’t these the same people that keep saying we need to have more babies, though?

  • Zier@fedia.io
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    8 hours ago

    From 1996-2007 Windows users already told the world that ‘AI Assistants’ can just fuck off. It was called Clippy, and everyone hated it! We will crush you just like we crushed Clippy.

    • AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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      11 hours ago

      She’s not just saying that the wealthy are trying to seize control — she also discusses how they’re leveraging the rhetoric of inevitable AI in order to build the foundations for future control. Significantly, she identifies this attempt as being driven by anxiety that the wealthy feel about their future control, and discusses strategies for resisting that.

      What she’s saying is far from obvious; I’ve seen so many anti-AI, anti-capitalist folk unwittingly perpetuating the rhetorical agenda of the wealthy by accepting the notion that a society ran by super advanced AI is inevitable.

      • Grandwolf319@sh.itjust.works
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        3 hours ago

        Yeah I call bullshit on that.

        Automation is inevitable, doesn’t mean decision making will be.

        Having fully automated factory that churns out 100 cars a day is not dystopian if you can have people able to configure that number.

        The dystopian part is having only a few with “admin access”.

        • AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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          1 hour ago

          Call bullshit on what, sorry? I’m not clear on whether you’re calling bullshit on the professor in the article, or the wealthy assholes who the professor is critiquing

      • jaybone@lemmy.zip
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        10 hours ago

        The wealthy feel anxiety about their future control? Why would they need to feel that?

        • Tollana1234567@lemmy.today
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          10 hours ago

          Because they ran out of things to distract the masses, plus they need the plebs in order to maintain their little fiefdoms.