US judge orders lawyers to sign AI pledge, warning chatbots 'make stuff up'
I wonder if this had anything to do with it?
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy...e-up-by-chatgpt-judge-calls-it-unprecedented/
US judge orders lawyers to sign AI pledge, warning chatbots 'make stuff up'
I've found that the grammar checkers that come with Windows are not too bad. But, like all of this stuff, you can't just accept what they offer blindly. You need to judge for yourself whether to take the recommendations, but I would guess that I agree with the recommendations about 2/3 of the time, possibly more. Also, I've learned a few things about grammar over the years from the explanations that are given.The traditional job of Proofreader may be making a comeback. Unfortunately, in today's electronic communications world, there has been too much reliance on spell checkers which have no ability to correct poor word usage. What is even worse is speech to text converters which are horrible for correct word usage and substitute "Phonetic" variations that are horribly incorrect usages.
"It's called a chat bot, not a research bot"I wonder if this had anything to do with it?
https://arstechnica.com/tech-policy...e-up-by-chatgpt-judge-calls-it-unprecedented/
Artificial intelligence is actually really stupid. ChatGPT will never be creative.“I’ve toyed around with ChatGPT a bit," Brooker reveals in the new issue of Empire. "The first thing I did was type 'generate Black Mirror episode' and it comes up with something that, at first glance, reads plausibly, but on second glance, is $h!t. Because all it’s done is look up all the synopses of Black Mirror episodes, and sort of mush them together. Then if you dig a bit more deeply you go, 'Oh, there’s not actually any real original thought here.' It’s [1970s impressionist] Mike Yarwood — there’s a topical reference.”
I don't know that I would go that far. Look at how many shows and movies and books have come out in the last (pick your number) of decades. What fraction of them can truly be described as "creative" or "original"? Almost everything that humans produce in these fields is about as creative or original as the tripe ChatGPT and its ilk are spewing forth. So why should the standard for ChatGPT-like "authors" be any higher?https://www.empireonline.com/tv/news/charlie-brooker-chatgpt-black-mirror-episode-exclusive-image/
Artificial intelligence is actually really stupid. ChatGPT will never be creative.
Agree. And this is the point that all of the ChatGPT fans seem unable to grasp. Garbage in, Garbage out. If the AI training data is thoroughly polluted with inaccurate content, how can it be reasonable to expect the output that results to not be? But these people tend to come from a "big data" mindset that believes that only the "three V's" matter when it comes to large data sets -- volume, velocity, and variety, They don't care about validity or veracity and claim that, like working with large sample sizes in signal processing, the noise will average out leaving only the true signal. I think that, in many cases (including these large language models) they are making a couple of faulty assumptions. First, they are underestimating (if they ever actually did an estimate in the first place) the low signal-to-noise ratio of the content on the Internet, and second, they are assuming that the noise is random such that it tends to cancel out other noisy content and don't realize the degree to which the noise is not only systemic, but self-reinforcing.If most humans in the field are not creative or original, the tripe (at least tripe is edible) from ChatGPT that used that human writing as input, has no hope of even being more than a mediocre blend of leftovers and spoiled beer.
Nothing, it was a test created by a brilliant mind that greatly underestimated what a mind was..I wonder what tests one could use to tell if something produced was from a AI engine, a Human, some other animal ?
whats replaced the old Turing test ?
Searle's thought experiment begins with this hypothetical premise: suppose that artificial intelligence research has succeeded in constructing a computer that behaves as if it understands Chinese. It takes Chinese characters as input and, by following the instructions of a computer program, produces other Chinese characters, which it presents as output. Suppose, says Searle, that this computer performs its task so convincingly that it comfortably passes the Turing test: it convinces a human Chinese speaker that the program is itself a live Chinese speaker. To all of the questions that the person asks, it makes appropriate responses, such that any Chinese speaker would be convinced that they are talking to another Chinese-speaking human being.
The question Searle wants to answer is this: does the machine literally "understand" Chinese? Or is it merely simulating the ability to understand Chinese?[6][c] Searle calls the first position "strong AI" and the latter "weak AI".[d]
Searle does not disagree with the notion that machines can have consciousness and understanding, because, as he writes, "we are precisely such machines".[5] Searle holds that the brain is, in fact, a machine, but that the brain gives rise to consciousness and understanding using machinery that is non-computational. If neuroscience is able to isolate the mechanical process that gives rise to consciousness, then Searle grants that it may be possible to create machines that have consciousness and understanding. However, without the specific machinery required, Searle does not believe that consciousness can occur.
And at this point, our brains are to ourselves nothing more than mere black boxes. That is, information goes in and information comes out. And we know nothing about the process that takes place inside said boxes. Except that we know and we are aware that we are said boxes.Nothing, it was a test created by a brilliant mind that greatly underestimated what a mind was..
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_room
Yet most will trust another's mind before they trust their own.Even though we still have no way of proving that other consciousness but our own actually exists.
I'd say that we have to ... as a species, we have to trust Newton, Einstein et all if we want to move forward and not try to start from scratch every time we want to learn something.Yet most will trust another's mind before they trust their own.
Most of us know, the most easily fooled mind by our actions, is our own mind.Yet most will trust another's mind before they trust their own.
I don't think there's anything that needs replacing yet. Remember, a machine does not pass the Turing test by having a single instance of a single person interacting with it and being fooled. It passes the Turing test if there is no reliable way for any evaluator to observe the interactions between a human and the computer (without knowing which is which) and be able to determine which was which. The evaluator doesn't have to be right every time. Imagine that thousands of evaluators each observes thousands of sessions. The Turing Test would be considered failed if, collectively, the evaluators were able to make the determination correctly in a statistically significant fraction of instances.I wonder what tests one could use to tell if something produced was from a AI engine, a Human, some other animal ?
whats replaced the old Turing test ?
Traditional science does not rely on trust. Only this new-agey post-modern crap they try to convince us is science requires us to abdicate our own minds.I'd say that we have to ... as a species, we have to trust Newton, Einstein et all if we want to move forward and not try to start from scratch every time we want to learn something.
Practically all of our human knowledge is inherited. There's only a small pinch that each generation contributes to the next one. And yet the cumulative effects have been astronomical in the last few decades.
Plenty of positive things to be grateful for nowadays, I'd say. Science and technology have made our lives the hell of a lot easier than our grandparents. I'm an optimistic at heart in that respect.
Yeah... trust should be applied to politicians only.Never trust a scientist who says, "trust me."
More and more there's no difference.Yeah... trust should be applied to politicians only.
I have never seen anyone who is a “scientist” say “trust me” concerning a topic of scientific investigation. What makes a person a scientist is the practice of science which is a combination of the scientific method constantly seeking new and better ways to confirm theories.Traditional science does not rely on trust. Only this new-agey post-modern crap they try to convince us is science requires us to abdicate our own minds.
Never trust a scientist who says, "trust me."
I have no idea why you imagine you have access to what it “really” going on, but you don’t. You are not more informed because you only look for conspiracy and political agenda—you are actually less so because your confirmation bias (something we all have) gets used to prove (to yourself) that your political beliefs are correct.You are a relic. And naive. Our children are not taught to think this way anymore -- or at all. They are taught to believe and obey, or be destroyed.
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