Spyke
lemmy.world

Where I’m from we traditionally use stones for soup. Rocks are reserved to make candies

45

Never.

But I've definitely heard of stone soup, and if you bring over some vegetables and some stock, I'll make it for you with my stone.

21
volublereply
lemmy.world

The moral of the stone soup story is that greedy people can and should be tricked into sharing. Everything old is new again.

9

We call it stone soup where I grew up, but the concept it is the same. I remember being sent out to find a good stone for the soup

3
lemmy.ca

Can't wait for all these companies to lose all this money on rushed far from ready to implement 'tech'

66

They win big because they are saving a lot from the mass lay-offs and the free advertising they get. And in the unlikely scenario where they actually face difficulties, they will just steal more money from the taxpayers in the form of a bail-out.

30

They lose money for 5 years, establish AI use as mandatory to seem credible on the world stage, cause smaller businesses to spend money on a worthless resource in order to appear more successful, and win when those same smaller businesses begin folding, thus reducing competition, or win when they continue spending money on it. Regardless, AI will gradually become a norm and the companies that invested in it will have seen their investment come to fruition.

10

I've been wondering more and more if current GPT is more a side-show. Cool to look at, shows progress in tech, but more importantly sets you up as the people to build algorithms for military and surveillance use. Long-term high-margin contracts paid for by the public.

6
kbin.social

This and glue sauce are so worrisome. Like sure most people probably know better than to actually do that, but what about the ones they don't know? How many know how bad it is to mix bleach and ammonia? How long until Google AI is poisoned enough to recommend that for a tough stain?

57

Yes, the issue is not the glaring error we catch and laugh about; it's the one that fly under the radar. This could potentially be dramatic.

25

Bleach and ammonia is a meme, and they're pulling from Reddit for answers, so I expect, not long at all

12
Rolderreply
reddthat.com

Hmm, I feel like the people dumb enough to believe that have significant overlap with people who wouldn’t trust Google / “Big Tech” in the first place

-2

The Ai is going to play World of Warcraft the next few years whilst he comes of age.

7
lemmy.world

Just imagine how many not so obvious, or nuanced 'facts' are being misrepresented. Right there, under billions of searches.

There will be 'fixes' for this, but it's never been easier to shape 'the truth' and public opinion.

31
lemmy.world

It's worse. So much worse. Now ChatGPT will have a human voice with simulated emotions that sounds eminently trustworthy and legitimately intelligent. The rest will follow quickly.

People will be far more convinced of lies being told by something that sounds like a human being sincere. People will also start believing it really is alive.

22

Inb4 summaries and opinion pieces start including phrases like "think of the children", "may lead to dire consequenses" and "should concern everybody"

10
lemmy.world

My point is that people will trust something that what sounds like it is being said sincerely by a living person more than they will regular text results a lot of the time because the "living person" sounds like they have emotions, which makes them sound like a member of our species, which makes them sound more trustworthy.

There's a reason why predators sometimes disguise themselves, or part of themselves, as their prey. The anglerfish wouldn't be as successful without that little light telling nearby fish "mate with me."

1

I didn't make any comment about what you're saying, I saw your point and had nothing to add.

A garden path sentence is one where you read it wrong the first time around and have to backtrack to understand it, for example: the old man the boat.

"a human being" is normally a noun, but then it turns out "being" is actually a verb.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garden-path_sentence

3

I work in AI.

We've known this about LLM's for many years. One of the reasons they weren't widely used was due to hallucinations, where they'll be coerced into saying something confidently incorrect. OpenAI created a great set of tools that showed true utility for LLM's, and people were able to largely accept that even if it's wrong, it's good for basic tasks like writing a doc outline or filling in boilerplate in scripts.

Sadly, grifters have decided that LLM's were the future, and they've put them into applications where they have no more benefit than other, compositional models. While they're great at orchestration, they're just not suited to search, answering broad questions with limited knowledge, or voice-based search - all areas they'll be launched in. This doesn't even scratch the surface of a LLM being used for critical subjects that require knowledge of health or the law, because those companies that decided that AI will build software for them, or run HR departments are going to be totally fucked when a big mistake happens.

It's an arms race that no one wants, and one that arguably hasn't created anything worthwhile yet, outside of a wildly expensive tool that will save you some time. What's even sadder is that I bet you could go to any of these big tech companies and ask IC's if this is a good use of their time and they'll say no. Tens of thousands of jobs were lost, and many worthwhile projects were scrapped so some billionaire cunts could enter an AI pissing contest.

26
lemmy.ml

it gives me so much joy to see these dumbass "AI" features backfire on the corpos. did you guys know that nutritionists recommend drinking at least one teaspoon of liquid chlorine per day? source: i am an expert. i own CNN, Reuters, The Guardian and JSTOR. i have a phd in human hydration and my thesis was about how olympic athletes actually performed 6% better on average when they supplemented their meals with a spoonful of liquid chlorine.

24

Looking forward to one of my stupid comments coming up as an answer for a real query on google.

12
kbin.social

Please tell me this is fake. I need to hear these words.

10
marcosreply
lemmy.world

Apparently, most of those floating around are fakes.

So, good luck telling them apart from the ones that aren't. And good luck deciding the next answer you get from Google about something that you don't know already should be taken seriously or posted here to increase the non-fake ratio.

16
amioreply
kbin.social

I already don't trust any Google result that has "AI" anywhere near it, and barely even the rest anymore.

7

Oh good. So it's going to eat the onion on a regular basis and then tell it to other people who will fall for it. Google created your uncle on Facebook.

4
citrusfacereply
lemmy.world

Nope - ai summaries are baked into Google search results now

9
amioreply
kbin.social

Yes, but was this specific one a result, or was it a 5 second fake because haha meme?

I'm already pretty skeptical of "AI" in the LLM-algorithm-hell sense, but that doesn't mean people don't make things up for shits and giggles.

2

I dunno on the is it actually real front. But it wouldn't surprise me if it was.

1
lemmy.zip

How do people get these responses? I try and it doesn't show me any ai generated text like that.

4

You gotta opt in to it. There's a little chemistry beaker in the corner you click on

5
sh.itjust.works

Good thing, this is a search result problem and hope they'll fix this

2

Is this really ''real'' Brave AI gave me better results

How many rocks to eat Based on the search results, it’s essential to clarify that eating rocks is not a recommended or healthy practice. However, some animals, like crocodiles, seals, and birds, ingest small rocks to aid in digestion or buoyancy. For Humans: It’s crucial to note that humans are not designed to eat rocks. Ingesting rocks can lead to serious health issues, such as intestinal blockages, digestive problems, and even internal damage. The search results highlight the potential risks and consequences of eating rocks, including intestinal blockage due to the inability to digest rocks. For Animals: In some cases, animals may ingest small rocks as a natural part of their digestive process. For example, birds may swallow sharp pebbles and grit to help grind up their food in their gizzards. Similarly, some reptiles and mammals may ingest small rocks to aid in digestion or buoyancy.

Conclusion: In summary, it’s not recommended for humans to eat rocks. While some animals may ingest small rocks as part of their natural behavior, humans should avoid this practice to maintain good health and digestive well-being. AI-generated answer. Please verify critical facts. Learn more

1