andallthat
@andallthat@lemmy.world
- Comment on After 40 years of being free Microsoft has added a paywall to Notepad 1 week ago:
the news is more that they are trying to shoehorn AI in effing Notepad to make sure even those little snippets of text can be used for training
- Comment on Who needs a sneaker bot when AI can hallucinate a win for you? - EQL Blog 1 week ago:
I think that using large language models to summarize email (especially marketing), news, social media posts or any type of content that uses a lot of formulaic writing is going to generate lots of errors.
The way I understand large language models, they create chains of words statistically, based on “what is this most likely to say based on my training material”?
In marketing emails, the same boilerplate language is used to say very different things. “You have been selected” emails have similar wording to “sorry this time you have not won but…”. Same cheery “thanks for being such a wonderful sucker” tone and 99% similar verbiage except for a crucial “NOT” here and there.
- Comment on Rust is Eating JavaScript 2 weeks ago:
well, joke’s on you. Since I rewrote her in Rust, my mum runs the 100 meters hurdles in 14 seconds
- Comment on Study of 8k Posts Suggests 40+% of Facebook Posts are AI-Generated 4 weeks ago:
But if half of the engagement is from AI, isnt that a grift on advertisers? Why should I pay for an ad on Facebook that is going to be “seen” by AI agents? AI don’t buy products (yet?)
- Comment on Russian TV companies demand 2 undecillion rubles from Google 3 months ago:
on the other hand, when Putin’s done killing off most of their own present and future workforce in a senseless war and completely tanking his own economy, that might be the equivalent of like $3
- Comment on Would you trust AI to scan your genitals for STIs? 5 months ago:
I’m not sure we, as a society, we’re ready to trust ML models to do things that might affect lives. This is true for self-driving cars and I expect it to be even more true for medicine. In particular, we can’t accept ML failures, even when they get to a point where they are statistically less likely than human errors.
I don’t know if this is currently true or not, so please don’t shoot me for this specific example, but IF we were to have reliable stats that everything else being equal, self-driving cars cause less accidents than humans, a machine error will always be weird and alien and harder for us to justify than a human one. “He was drinking too much because his partner left him”, “she was suffering from a health condition and had an episode while driving”… we have the illusion that we understand humans and (to an extent) that this understanding helps us predict who we can trust not to drive us to our death or not to misdiagnose some STI and have our genitals wither. But machines? Even if they were 20% more reliable than humans, how would we know which ones we can trust?
- Comment on What’s the most overhyped tech trend right now? 5 months ago:
Most things to do with Green Energy. Don’t get me wrong, I think solar panels or wind turbines are great. I just think that most of the reported figures are technically correct but chosen to give a misleadingly positive impression of the gains.
Relevant smbc: www.smbc-comics.com/comic/capacity
- Comment on Snowflake is such a weird insult as it seems to imply it's best to just be like everyone else 6 months ago:
It is about fragility, like others said, but It is also about uniqueness, in the sense of “oh, so you think you’re soo special!”
- Comment on 77% Of Employees Report AI Has Increased Workloads And Hampered Productivity, Study Finds 7 months ago:
AKA “shit, looks like now we need to re-hire some of those engineers”
- Comment on 77% Of Employees Report AI Has Increased Workloads And Hampered Productivity, Study Finds 7 months ago:
TBH those same colleagues were probably just copy/pasting code from the first google result or stackoverflow answer, so arguably AI did make them more productive at what they do
- Comment on An Algorithm Told Police She Was Safe. Then Her Husband Killed Her. 7 months ago:
About 20 new cases of gender violence arrive every day, each requiring investigation. Providing police protection for every victim would be impossible given staff sizes and budgets.
I think machine-learning is not the key part, the quote above is. All these 20 people a day come to the police for protection, a very small minority of them might be just paranoid, but I’m sure that most of them had some bad shit done to them by their partner already and (in an ideal world) would all deserve some protection. The algorithm’s “success” in defined in the article as reducing probability of repeat attacks, especially the ones eventually leading to death.
The police are trying to focus on the ones who are deemed to be the most at risk. A well-trained algorithm can help reduce the risk vs the judgement of the possibly overworked or inexperienced human handling the complaint? I’ll take that. But people are going to die anyway. Just, hopefully, a bit less of them and I don’t think it’s fair to say that it’s the machine’s fault when they do.
- Comment on The app that promised to ‘use AI to weed out daters with STIs’ has been shut down 7 months ago:
I have to admit It was a solid idea, though. Dick picks should be one of the best training sets you can find on the internet and you can assume that the most prolific senders are the ones with the lowest chance of having an STI (or any real-life sexual activity).
- Comment on What if Tyrannosaurus Rexes moved and walked like chicken do? 8 months ago:
I do see your point, it would probably look funny from a safe distance… Chicken (especially roosters) can be vicious. Up close, a dinosaur-sized chicken would be freaking terrifying!
- Comment on Why people are boycotting Asus all of a sudden? Asus outrage explained 10 months ago:
we are doing this, now?
- Comment on Disney+ Drops 1.3 Million Subscribers Amid Price Hike, Streaming Loss Shrinks by $300 Million 1 year ago:
“see this chart here? We lose money for every subscriber! We’ll never make any money until we get rid of all of theml”
- Comment on HP sued (again) for blocking third-party ink from printers, accused of monopoly 1 year ago:
printing all that paper in order to sue them probably ended up costing more than their fine
- Comment on Amazon lays off 500 Twitch employees, hundreds more at MGM and Prime Video 1 year ago:
he doesn’t even make TEN billions a year? Ha, what a loser!
- Comment on How many of you actually use the headphone jack on your phone? 1 year ago:
I do. Right now I’m listening to music on my phone through wired headphones. I have too many smart things already connected via bluetooth to my phone: 2 different wireless speakers, an electronic drumset, smart TV, car, fitness tracker (I’m sure I’m forgetting something) and I came to like the idea of physically plugging something in order for sound to be played through it, especially if both phone and external device are physically close to me during the whole interaction, like with a headset.
- Comment on Google lays off employees working on its voice assistant 1 year ago:
Have seen that too. The canned press release from all of them is something like “as part of our continued effort to make the org more efficient we have aggregated tram X with team Y and as a result a handful of roles were no longer needed. Our company remains focused and confident in our growth”. Has AI taken over the PR department too?
From what I can see, this is not even about individual performance. It looks like a continuous game of musical chair where an entire team here and there is suddenly decimated or completely removed with non-existent internal communication.
- Comment on Apple AirTags stalking led to ruin and murders, lawsuit says — Dozens join lawsuit alleging Apple AirTags are stalkers’ “weapon of choice.” 1 year ago:
But it is exactly because they’re cheap, widely available and work well. Before AirTags, I’m not sure where you could acquire the technology you mention, but probably through some specialized channel requiring at least some tech knowledge. Also purchasing from that channel would presumably look at least a tiny bit suspect, because you were purchasing spying equipment, not something that is marketed as a way not to lose your luggage
And I get it, I have never tried AirTags but they do sound great for not losing your luggage. It’s just that the illicit way to use them is so evident that it’s like those “face massage” vibrators
- Comment on A new smartphone again? Rethink unhealthy culture of frequent upgrades 1 year ago:
it’s not just phones, though. None of my refrigerators, washing machines, dishwashers have ever lasted more than 10 years; I think the average is about 5 years before they stop working, get all rusty or a very expensive piece breaks so they are not worth repairing. Meanwhile all of my granma’s old kitchen appliances are still working perfectly after 60+ years of service.
Sure, it might be just that over-optimizing how cheap they are to make also makes them less durable, but I don’t see a lot of motivation from companies to go out of their way to build durable things either. And it’s not that I think Corporate = Bad; as you say it’s a cost/benefit thing, it’s just that the “benefit” companies try to maximize is their shareholders’, not our planet’s. It’s on Politics to create a legal framework where some of the cost to our planet is shared with companies (so they have incentives to make things durable/repairable again) and on us consumer to choose wisely what to buy, when and from whom.
- Comment on Calif. passes strongest right-to-repair bill yet, requiring 7 years of parts 1 year ago:
Thanks for the additional information. I wasn’t in line to buy an iPhone 15 just yet; when I said “if it turns out it’s more repairable” I mean if it stands the test of time I might consider an iPhone 17 or 18…
- Comment on Calif. passes strongest right-to-repair bill yet, requiring 7 years of parts 1 year ago:
I was as surprised as you to see Apple mentioned as supporting the bill, in the article. Thanks for pointing me to Fairphone, seems amazing!
- Comment on Calif. passes strongest right-to-repair bill yet, requiring 7 years of parts 1 year ago:
So far I’ve mostly seen iPhone 15 panned for lack of innovative features, but if it turns out that it’s actually easier to repair (as Apple is saying) it would be a killer feature for me
- Comment on Whatsapp has begun working on support for third party chats (Telegram/Signal) 1 year ago:
I might be wrong, but I don’t think Whatsapp would try to implement its own version of Telegram’s, Signal’s and every other protocol to “talk” to all of these other apps. I bet they will provide an API to interoperate with Whatsapp that these other clients may (or may not) choose to implement, in order to send their messages to Whatsapp users.
- Comment on someone was alive and died the most painful way possible 1 year ago:
I agree with you, and that’s what I choose to think when I feel like the “best” version of me.
But there are moments (or a part of me) that has a way more violent disposition and feels differently about people who do terrible thing.
I’m a very calm person and not at all violent so please don’t report me to the police on the base of these posts… That violent part of me is small and weak, but I just think it’s important to acknowledge it because it’s also the part that makes me recognize that a rapist or a murderer is a person like me and that it might be me, with the wrong set of circumstances, life choices and frame of mind.
- Comment on someone was alive and died the most painful way possible 1 year ago:
He mentions rapists and murderers. I choose to think that they don’t deserve to be given a gruesome death (or a death sentence at all for that matter) but I’d be lying if I said I have never felt that way when reading about some f-ed up stuff on the news. Maybe I’m also higher on the Hitler scale than I thought I was.
- Comment on someone was alive and died the most painful way possible 1 year ago:
Shit, I’m sorry, it was insensitive of me to make that joke (well, half-joke)
- Comment on someone was alive and died the most painful way possible 1 year ago:
Well, they probably didn’t do it very scientifically but if someone could think of it and the tools existed, someone in history is likely to have tried a lot of painful methods for killing people.
Impaled people, for instance, could allegedly take days to die. Being slowly eaten by ants or rats sounds pretty painful too
There’s one called “life” that is pretty cruel too. It might anywhere from seconds to more than a hundred years to die and some.people get to experience a lot of pain throughout the experience.
- Comment on Microsoft accused of malware-like tactics, again, in attempt to push users onto Bing | Microsoft claims the behavior was unintended 1 year ago:
No, you see, we didn’t intend to ask users. It was just supposed to switch to Bing