It’s going to be funnier: imagine throwing in tons of data at an LLM, most of the data will get abstracted and grouped, most will be extractable indirectly, some will be extractable verbatim… and any piece of it might be a hallucination, no guarantees! 😅.
Courts will have a field day with that.
Programmer and sysadmin (DevOps?), wannabe polymath in tech, science and the mind. Neurodivergent, disabled, burned out, and close to throwing in the towel, but still liking ponies 🦄 and sometimes willing to discuss stuff.
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That’s why AI companies have been giving out generic chatbots for free, but charge for training domain-specific ones. People paying for using the generic ones, is just the tip of the iceberg.
The future is going to be local or on-prem LLMs, fine tuned on domain knowledge, most likely multiple ones per business/user. It is estimated that businesses are holding orders of magnitude more knowledge, than what has been available for AI training. Will also be interesting to see what kind of exfiltration becomes possible, when one of those internal LLMs gets leaked.
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Copyright Office head fired after reporting AI training isn’t always fair use4·11 hours agoIs Disney no longer a “pal”, or did it stop making money?
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Yes, AI will eventually replace some workers. But that day is still a long way off2·1 day agoAll of them. The moment they summarize results, it automatically filters out all the chaff. Doesn’t mean what’s left is necessarily true, just like publishing a paper doesn’t mean it wasn’t p-hacked, but all the boilerplate used for generating content and SEO, is gone.
Starting with Google’s AI Overview, all the way to chatbots in “research” mode, or AI agents, they return the original “bulletpoint” that stuff was generated from.
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Yes, AI will eventually replace some workers. But that day is still a long way off4·1 day agoCan you elaborate? It does match my personal experience, and I’ve been on both ends of the trash flinging.
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Yes, AI will eventually replace some workers. But that day is still a long way off1·1 day agoA lot of people have been working tedious and repetitive “filler” jobs.
- Computers replaced a lot of typists, drafters, copyists, calculators, filers, clerks, etc.
- LLMs are replacing receptionists, secretaries, call center workers, translators, slop “artists”, etc.
- AI Agents are in the process of replacing aides, intermediate administrative personnel, interns, assistants, analysts,
spammerssalespeople, basic customer support, HR personnel, etc.
In the near future, AI-controlled robots are going to start replacing low skilled labor, then intermediate skilled ones.
“AI” has the meaning of machines replacing what used to require humans to perform. It’s a moving goalpost: once one is achieved, we call it an “algorithm” and move to the next one, and again, and again.
Right now, LLMs are at the core of most AI, but AI has already moved past that, to “AI Agents”, which is a fancy way of saying “a loop of an LLM and some other tools”. There are already talks of moving past that too, the next goalpost.
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Yes, AI will eventually replace some workers. But that day is still a long way off6·1 day agoWhose LLMs?
Content farms and SEO experts have been polluting search results for decades. Search LLMs have leveled the playing field: any trash a content farm LLM can spit out, a search LLM can filter out.
Basically, this:
I was going to say that AI has a lot of implications in the online world that Mozilla was supposed to promote… but maybe you’re right, the AI genie is out of the bottle and there is little left to do about it. Its impact will be whatever it will be, no matter what people want to say about it.
Not sure which “old Mozilla” you want, the 1998 one? the 2005 one? the 2015 one? It has changed a lot indeed, but kind of has been Google’s anti-anti-thrust shield for 20+ years.
From those projects, which ones are out of scope for the Mozilla Manifesto?
The African nuclear reactors might need more explaining, but the rest seem to be right on the goals:
- Anti-censorship groups
- Lobbying EU AI regulations
- Tool to reveal censorship on ISPs
- Coding/operations related carbon footprint and pollution, which can be used to prevent people’s access
Is there more information about that nuclear reactor?
Pollution related to computing and coding, seem relevant to the mission statement.
What would be the proper advocacy groups? Would you’ve ever heard of Mozilla without some advocacy group?
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•OpenAI scraps controversial plan to become for-profit after mounting pressure2·6 days agoOllama has the best GDPR compliance: my hardware, my data.
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Signal clone used by Trump official stops operations after report it was hacked2·6 days agohttps://www.archives.gov/records-mgmt
Archiving communications is not optional (yet).
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•Facebook Allegedly Detected When Teen Girls Deleted Selfies So It Could Serve Them Beauty Ads1·6 days agoI’m still “using” Facebook, if by “using” we mean subscribing to some groups, sending birthday greetings to old friends, and rarely posting anything. It doesn’t feed me political content, any time it tries to push anything controversial, it gets blocked.
I do get political content on Threads though, but that’s my choice.
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Free and Open Source Software@beehaw.org•Markdown and the Slow Fade of the Formatting Fetish5·6 days agoKeeping in mind it’s an advertorial for their apps…
Not sure what they mean by “weird characters”, but chatbots add zero-width Unicode characters as a watermarking mechanism, and LLMs output their own tags to mark different sections.
(the “stochastic parrots” expression is already a contradiction, but whatever)
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Gaming@beehaw.org•Players Have Too Many Options to Spend $80 on a Video Game2·8 days agoFun fact: you can get a machine to do that, for about the price of 3 games. It will even last longer than the games.
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Gaming@beehaw.org•After Years of Struggle, Blizzard Has Found Itself in Uncharted Territory: Overwatch Players Are Having Fun Again2·8 days agoLet me know when stuff is no longer locked behind a “Battle Pass”.
I got pretty much all the cosmetics in OW1 without paying for a single lootbox, and definitely refuse to pay for the privilege of FOMO.
jarfil@beehaw.orgto Technology@beehaw.org•China is building a cyber army of hackers, report finds2·8 days agoWhy is this article “critical with China”? From the sound of it, the Tianfu Cup is clear about its goals, that’s a surprisingly high level of transparency. All hackathons are geared towards finding and hiring hackers, both by companies and by governments. This way, people can decide whether they want to be recruited by the CCP or not.
if enough people collectively decided to vote 3rd party.
Then it would either become the 1st/2nd party, or disappear into oblivion. If it could became part of Congress, where it could look for alliances, then maybe… but based on current sentiment, it seems unlikely.
Yeah, I don’t think I like llamafile, reusing some weights between models, and smaller updates, sounds like a better idea.
What I’d like to see is a unified WebNN support, for CPU, GPU, and NPU: WebNN Overview
(Not to pull rank, but my mail profile can be tracked to Netscape Navigator, across multiple OSs 😁)