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For someone who is new go drawing and digital art, AI art has made it HARDER for me to find references. I spent hours using an image of a field with horses as reference and didn't really know why I felt like my drawing made no sense, until I spent a bit longer looking at the details and realized the reference was AI generated.
I lost hours of work because I didn't realize the image wasn't real, …
just saying, before relying on any tool, give it a pass through Winston AI to be sure it holds up
I'm a programmer. I'm often asked for help by novice coders. They paste me their entire project and ask me "Why doesn't this work?" I ask, "What isn't working?" Then I notice that the entire project is AI generated and they don't even know what is working, let alone what's broken, and so I don't help them. Why should I spend time analysing code they didn't even write themselves? Get the AI that w…
As a seasoned computer programmer with over four decades of experience, I cannot help but feel a sense of apprehension when it comes to the progress of AI technology. While it is undeniably impressive that we have reached a point where AI can generate code and create virtually anything, it is disconcerting to see that not everyone is taking into account the essential principles laid out by Asimov…
1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
2. A robot must obey the orders given it by human beings except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
3. A robot must protect its own existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.
Would it be too much to ask for these laws to be incorporated i…
I got my first ever commissions and an interview for a news site by standing up against ai art and showing people what I'm capable of as a human being. Couldn't be more proud of what's happening, I hope we soon get our rights as artists protected by law
Also, when new languages, technologies, and problem sets arrive, who will generate enough training data for AI to learn from?
I think we need regulation for AI, but now we're getting it in every device without any control at all ...
They're definitely violating not just Italian privacy laws but EU privacy laws as well. Italy is the first domino to fall in Europe likely because the leadership there is most distrustful of AI.
The eventual Open AI executives testimony to Congress here in the US is gonna be a doozy.
Tbh it just feels as when ever a part of ChatGPT gets solid traction, it get nerfed to oblivion - and I’ll bet a fine amount that this ‘nerf’ is only made to cut out pieces of ChatGPT that can be sold as stand-alone versions of ChatGPT.
Soon you can pay for lawyer-ChatGPT, developer-ChatGPT and … why would they sell all of these for 20$/month if you can sell them individually for much more to p…
He’s not really wrong. The timeline may be longer than you think. As of right now, millions of jobs are currently being replaced, like today. Wendy’s is eliminating all drive through workers with AI. You might scoff at that but think about a 24 hour Wendy’s, that’s 4 shifts or more per restaurant. So 4 jobs. This will happen rapidly over all fast food and take over places. It will just keep expan…
What if we selected some 3 or 4 humans, and we give them powers and resources to them make some plans for the future, to stop the AI.
But since their job is to create a plan that an AGI cannot understand, they cannot talk to others about this plan. And their job is to be deceivers, at the same time, creating a plan.
We can call them *Wallfacers*, as in the Buddhist tradition.
10 years ago, everyone in AI said that they had to go open source and share research in order to accelerate the process, but for some reason (capitalism) many US companies* reverted to proprietary modes of development and now they are getting destroyed by, you guessed it, open source.
Shareholder supremacy with no clear business model is not the way to go.
Edit due to misinformation:
*With Met…
Nobody's gonna notice what happened to Gen Z because by the time anybody could see results, AI will be doing the same thing to the next generation at an even scarier rate, and that will be the new thing we care about. As a millennial, we were definitely the guinea pigs for this, and by the time it got to you it was streamlined and fine-tuned to be as addictive as possible, and nobody's talking ab…
Just so everyone knows, from now until the end of your life, you’re going to see Trump deepfakes and meet conspiracy theorists convinced he’s still alive. He’s never truly going to go away. You’re going to see his face all the time so long as screens exist.
The first one is AI, it has no music in the background unlike in everyday life. In everyday life music is always playing for me, the Jurassic Park theme is playing
To be fair, the point about LLMs role playing is probably a better point than you think. Because that's really all they're ever doing. They don't remember the conversation they had with you yesterday, they don't really understand any of the stuff you're talking about. They're just assuming it as a premise and going from there. Which is all role-playing is.
AI is replacing what executives THOUGHT developers do. And turns out AI needs even more developers to automate a small set of what developers do.
The cop valuing the word of a Private AI System over a Govermental ID, is practically the same as him valuing the word of a random guy off the street over a Govermental ID just because the random guy has a cool name. Kinda crazy bro.
The AI system is privately owned by the casino, and is not a proper law enforcement tool.
Companies won’t use AI taking jobs to lower prices, but will use it to increase profits.