We're headed for a real-life movie it appears.
What the hell are the good things it can be used for? It seems like a f*cking nightmare honestly
AI could easily be used by criminals to steal money/data. It's a double edged sword. Depends on the user.
Heard about that.They've already had a case where thieves copied the voice of a ladies daughter, then called the lady demanding ransom and putting the "daugher" on the phone. She said it sounded just like her and she had to track her down to make sure it was a hoax. She said it was scary how spot on the imitation was.
Heard about that.
Here's exclusive video from that encounter:
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With all we've learned about Social Media and the other forms of media censoring, canceling, selectively reporting, flat out making up ****, etc., how does AI not open the door wide open for Big Brother to control every bit of information an individual has access to? It's one more tool that One World Government could use to control the peons (99.9% of us), imo.
Your judging Miles on things he hasn't even done yetAhh is this guy Miles Dyson?
But it’s all in the name of DEI so it’s okayIt's a bizarre paradox. All these people know full well it can absolutely mean the end of humanity yet they race to the cliff full speed ahead. It literally defies rational explanation.
Don’t blame me, you were gonna die anyway.It's a bizarre paradox. All these people know full well it can absolutely mean the end of humanity yet they race to the cliff full speed ahead. It literally defies rational explanation.
Maybe Dr. Boat will post on the Paddock again. At least that's something again, I guess.For example, reviewing medical imaging and comparing against databases of every other image ever taken when scanning for abnormalities and achieving levels of accurate diagnosis and early detection humans could never come close to achieving.
It literally has nothing to do with DEI other than it giving possible capability to democratize data science. Obviously trolling, but just sayingBut it’s all in the name of DEI so it’s okay![]()
I do kind of like that it's shaking up the arts the most lately.
Oh that splatter painting you made in 5 minutes is no longer worth $350,000? What a shame..
I'm a friend of Sarah Connor.No. We will replace you.
It literally has nothing to do with DEI other than it giving possible capability to democratize data science. Obviously trolling, but just saying
And lawyers and accountants.
Leeches
I'm a friend of Sarah Connor.
The “arts” have been the wealthy’s money laundering scheme for centuries. They do a nefarious deed and you buy a worthless painting and give it to them or buy it from them.I do kind of like that it's shaking up the arts the most lately.
Oh that splatter painting you made in 5 minutes is no longer worth $350,000? What a shame..
Just figured out the truly good use for AI (other than reading X-rays apparently) - there is a thread on rafters about replacing refs with AI. Yes please, go AI!
With UK's luck, the Rooferee would be probably be the lead consultant used by the NCAA to build it. We'd be forever- perma- super-screwed.Just figured out the truly good use for AI (other than reading X-rays apparently) - there is a thread on rafters about replacing refs with AI. Yes please, go AI!
This is the big one.But people with limited to no coding experience may become super hackers limited only by their desire to do harm.
It's not AI it's LLM
This is the big one.
Here's what I can't figure out - can we turn off Chat GPT and BARD? And if we did would there be others popping up? Or does this inherently need $100M server farms to effectively be the generative AI.
At the very least it would stop it where it is because it can't harvest more information from which to learn. That's why I posted early on, major major companies helped in the creation of chat because it needed enormous amounts of information and computing power possessed by only a handful.
Beyond the obvious concern of human extinction, a more refined ai could eliminate many/most jobs in existence today. Having 90-95% unemployment is not a good outcome for society. That's why I think ai should be limited in usage with the focus being on projects of sufficient high degree of public interest.
Then the question becomes - who makes that decision? The old farts in Congress who still can't send emails? The unelected bureaucracy that answers to no one? Some panel of completely altruistic tech minds (whomever that might be)?
I think that issue is going to delay its widespread acceptance in law / tax practices a bit longer than would otherwise occur. Everyone I know who has played with using it for legal drafting says that it has a tendency to make-up facts and case citations. I'm sure the programmers will figure that out eventually but professionals can't take the risk of relying on something with even a small threat of committing fraud/malpractice.I’ve been asking it tax questions, and it’s not good enough to replace me yet. Yesterday I asked it a specific question, and it cited made up case law for an incorrect answer.