Merry Christmas, Linux Community!
Dear Linux community,
In these unpredictable and often challenging times, I feel it’s more important than ever to pause and share heartfelt wishes. Merry Christmas to each and every one of you!
Let this holiday season be a moment of peace, where you can step back, breathe, and find some calm amidst the chaos. Take the opportunity to reconnect, reflect, and perhaps even find inspiration for the year ahead.
May your days be filled with joy, your systems stay secure, and your kernels remain stable. Here's to a festive season full of positivity and open-source spirit!
Warm wishes,
Your fellow penguin at heart.
P.S.: I had very little time, so the whole thing, was AI accelerated! Please forgive me :-)
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Finally AI slop. Linux is now a fully grown corpo and therefore the year of Linux desktop is here
TempleOS is the only OS corpos won't touch, It's protected by a holy shield!
King Terry the Terrible is watching everyone that uses TempleOS and will execute anyone who misuses it with an A10 gun, the fist of God.
In these corporate times we can stay free, share the code, and help our neighbors. Together we can share the joyous spirit of friendship, hacking, and arguing endlessly over which distro is best. In conclusion, Linux provides us with many good things, and should be celebrated.
You could have not using ai slop to illustrate your post.
Your AI acceleration makes the whole thing a lot less genuine.
yawn. So long as he used a local FOSS model there's nothing wrong with AI.
It being proprietary isnt in the top 5 of the list of my problems with AI
Thanks for letting me know you're a moron. Blocked.
edit: Please be nice to each other! :(
Lots of downvotes in this reply chain. Not to be a "I don't wanna be either side" kinda guy but AI isn't all bad and isn't all good either. (Greys!)
Merry Christmasing should be a genuine hug. Even if this was made by a homegrown open-weight open-dataset inference model, it's nearly 100% low-effort generated -- holidays need the human aspect, no? Covering yourself up too much in AI takes away from the humanness with corporate diction, and people need evidence of risktaking genuineness nowadays.
On the other hand, AI is definitely useful... but elsewhere. It's not strictly anti-human even if conglomerates are using it that way, which I think you agree on. Wading through HOA using local NLP setups is human. Looking through a Mandarin thread when typical translation sucks, is human.
But there are domains for its use and there is ethical stuff to work on. This post just doesn't fit the domain too well, as others agree...
eh, i don't see it as any different than most of the cards in a store, it's all incredibly low effort and cringy, yet no one seems to give a shit about that.
That's an interesting perspective actually
Maybe it's because of who's giving them? If my little cousin gave me an AI Christmas card, I'd be happier than if a stranger gave me one on the street. (Though I'd feel bummed if they didn't even marker in a single custom sentence)
i.e. higher standards of creativity/effort from a stranger than from a family member.
Also the stranger isn't stuffing a tenner in the card lmao
i just kinda feel eh about them as a concept, it's just a piece of paper with an image on it where the sum total involvement from the giver is that they selected the card, and even that is almost never something that took more than 20 seconds.
It's a worse version of postcards, which usually have some actually interesting art on them (or a photo) and is relevant to a journey they made.
The idea that AI is fine is anti-human
This is irrational and reactionary.
It's a take based on an appeal to nature and noble savage fallacies propogated by neolibs and marketing teams making the "organic" play with their products.
AI is just a tool, it's misuse by Corpos is something we all agree is bad, but by themselves tools do not make you or anyone else less human, nor do glasses make those of poor sight less human etc.
How the absurdity of making such a statement on a sub defined by an identity tied to a computer operating system doesn't make you re-think that claim is beyond me.
Be better.
Edit: and no it's pointless to argue, nobody changes their minds, I'm just posting stuff like this so assholes I would like to have blocked come out and make themselves known as they always do.
Your 2nd paragraph is just a lie made up in your own head.
AI isn’t a tool, a brush is. A brush or any other tool lets humans create. an IGA (image generation algorithm) often mislabelled as AI doesn’t let you create instead it TAKES what other humans already had created and shushes it together without regard for any artistic expression, since as a computer program, it’s incapable of art. It’s plagiarism with extra steps.
Ai as a thing only exists today because it’s in the interest of corporations to replace humans with machines in order to funnel more wealth to the owning class.
However in a society with class equality AI would be worthless. It cannot “make” anything without someone else already having made that thing first, it’s a waste of time and an erosion to society, a cancer.
You will never change because simply put, you’re not smart enough to. You’re incapable of understanding how and why you’re wrong because you lack the intelligence, education and desire to grow.
Nothing says "Linux" more than paying a megacorp to steal the hard work of artists...
So, the art is obviously AI slop, but is the post body also AI? Because it reads really weird.
The very generic message makes me inclined to think so too
Ai slop
OP, please don’t post any more AI slop so I don’t get flooded with reports from users.
I don't know why everyone is saying it reads weird or its AI slop. To me it seemed pretty normal while reading, but I guess I'm so used to everything being written by AI nowadays I didn't notice at first. How do you all spot it usually?
AI structure can be pretty obvious if you know which English weapons it loves to spam. Let's walk it through (sorry for the wall of text lmfao):
I skip the image because the chimney mistake and overdone shading is obvious
So yeah this is at least 90% OpenAI. Too fuckin' bad.
I will have to stop manually typing ascending tricons. LOL. I have used them often in correspondence and documents. It was a technique taught in English class.
Only if there's too many is it a worry. I use it now and then bc I LOVE things in threes (I'm not Ben Affleck I swear), but...
in the above, the tricolon bonanza is insane -- how can you fit that many in such a short text?
You probably don't need to cut down :)
The inconsistent 2 spaces after “LOL.” shows this comment was from a human.
That was really helpful. Do you have any more tips on spotting ai generated text?
Sorry for the wall of text again c:
:::spoiler (CLICK HERE FOR BIG WALL)
AI text as a whole is usually structured, neutral-positive to positive shallowness. It's called slop because it's easy to make a lot of substanceless, nutrientless goo. One common structure is
What do we spot? Sets of three, largely perfect/riskless formal grammar (grammar perfection is not inhuman -- but a human might, say, take the informal risk of using lotsa parentheses (me...)), uncreative colon titles, SEO-style intros and conclusions, an odd corporate-style ethics hangup, em-dashes (the long —), and some of the stuff in that reddit link I mentioned are often giveaways.
Here's some examples in the wild:
Playing Dumb: How Arthur Schopenhauer Explains the Benefits of Feigned Ignorance. PeopleAndMedia. has useless headings and the colon structure I mentioned. There's also phrases like "Let's delve" and "unexpected advantage" -- ChatGPT likes pretending to be unconventional and has specific diction tics like "Here's to a bright future!" One interesting thing is that the article uses some block quotes and links -- this is rare for AI.
Why is PHP Used. robots.net. This is from a "slop site", one that is being overrun by AI articles. Don't read the whole thing, it's too long. Skim first. See how many paragraphs start with words like "additionally", "moreover", "furthermore", like a grade school English lit student? Furthermore (lol), look at the reasonings used:
ChatGPT-esque vocabulary is used (this is something you unfortunately get a feel for), and the reasoning isn't very committal. Instead of evaluating some specific event deeper, the article just lists technologies and says stuff like "PHP has comprehensive and well-maintained documentation, providing in-depth explanations, examples, and guides." So what if there's docs? Everyone has documentation. Name something PHP docs do better or worse. Look at this paragraph (SKIM IT, don't read deeply):
It doesn't actually SAY ANYTHING despite its length. The paragraph can be compressed to: "CodeIgniter has a light footprint". It doesn't even say whether we're talking about comparative speed, memory usage, or startup time. It's like they paid someone (openAI) to pad word count on the ensmallening I mentioned.
Before reading something, check the date. If it's after 2020, skims to be too long and not very deep, and has too many GPT tics (tricolons, vocab like "tapestry/delve", the SEO shit structure), then it's AI slop. Some readers actively avoid post-2020 articles but I can't relate.
edit: clarified that perfect grammar is humanly doable, but GPT-style riskless formal grammar is still distinct from grammatical human text
:::
the term "riskless grammar" perfectly puts into words how i felt about chatgpt's texts, every human-written text has something "wrong" with it grammar-wise, except maybe example essays by english teachers.
As an example, my previous paragraph has a lowercase I, too many commas, sentences compressed by using hyphens where they probably shouldnt go and probably some other stuff i missed.
But it still read well, at least i hope.
Most authors write their sentences their own way, and in my opinion, that's what makes reading their books interesting. Perfect grammar is boring and no fun to read.
as a fun experiment, i asked chatgpt to rewrite my first paragraph:
"The phrase "riskless grammar" accurately captures my impression of ChatGPT's texts. Unlike human-written content, which often contains grammatical imperfections—except perhaps for example essays by English teachers—ChatGPT's writing maintains a level of precision and correctness."
Kind of changed the meaning to be self-complimenting, which is funny.
edit: Normally I would have rewritten parts of this comment to make my point more clearly and be better to read, but i wanted to keep my first draft to make my point a bit better.
Ty for feedback :>
Your paragraph read well. I definitely agree -- grammar with risks, outside of hyper-formal sitches, is just stylized diction. ChatGPT could scarcely come up with an e.e. cummings poem (just tested now, it never gets the style about right), nor dare to abuse parentheses, nor remove cruft for conciseness (e.g. to start a sentence with "Kind of changed" instead of "This kind of changes" for compression (woot)). It's a "wrong" but not quite "wrong", and I'm glad that "riskless" manages to carry that feeling
And I edit a lot too :) it's the "post-email-send clarity" effect
Errors can give away that a human typed something, but knowing proper grammar, spelling, and syntax of English is totally neutral—if not to be somewhat expected from a native speaker/typer with a lifetime to learn the language they speak (especially if we consider how many Anglophones are monolingual + educated + have access to technology like spell check meaning there is little excuse for not having English mastery).
In my education, I got a public apology from a teacher letting the class know they tried to dig up proof of plagiarism in my persuasive papers, but for the first time proved themself incorrect on a plagiarism hunch. Humans are capable of writing well.
edit: updated accordingly for clarity
Ah, I mean proper grammar as in formal, largely riskless grammar. For example, AI wouldn't connect
with pluses, like a human would.
Not sure how I'd phrase that though. Maybe "perfect, risklessly formal grammar" as I just tried to call it? (i.e. if AI trainers consider using +'es a "risk", as opposed to staying formal and spick n' span clean).
Perfect grammar is humanly possible but there is some scrutiny that can be applied to GPT-style grammar, especially in the context of the casually-toned web (where 100%ed grammar isn't strictly necessary!).
Saved, thanks
Text may not be AI, image definitely is. Usually everything in AI images glows slightly, like here. And the placement of Tux in the sky has no rhyme or reason.
Also, what's that L logo in a circle?
Lemocratic Party
I was having a much better Christmas before I saw this AI slop on my feed.
AI slop, reported.
Reminds me of "Ahh bro I'm offended by christmas its evil, take the santa cap off vlc"
Nice idea but yeah, Ai stuff is a bit tacky. :)
Stop using AI to generate images. It's obvious, it looks awful, and companies are genuinely looking to use it to stop having to pay human artists.
It's chrism
Thank you!
merry Christmas friends ❤️🎄