28mmAtF8
28mmAtF8 t1_jeggyhd wrote
Reply to comment by AlfredKinsey in ChatGB: Tony Blair backs push for taxpayer-funded ‘sovereign AI’ to rival ChatGPT by signed7
Well, the problem there is who trained the AI?
28mmAtF8 t1_jeg5iip wrote
Reply to comment by ShadowRazz in ChatGB: Tony Blair backs push for taxpayer-funded ‘sovereign AI’ to rival ChatGPT by signed7
That's a little dystopian 😅
28mmAtF8 t1_jefv96k wrote
Reply to comment by tbkrida in ChatGB: Tony Blair backs push for taxpayer-funded ‘sovereign AI’ to rival ChatGPT by signed7
It's only as dystopian as it's use-case. The important factor in implementation would be that whatever group runs it needs to maintain some independence from political whims.
I don't have much more faith in corporations to be benevolent with them so I'd like to see public service AIs counterweight AIs that are launched with pure greed in mind.
28mmAtF8 t1_jefsota wrote
Reply to ChatGB: Tony Blair backs push for taxpayer-funded ‘sovereign AI’ to rival ChatGPT by signed7
I actually think this is a pretty good idea. We need to keep in mind that there won't be one "all powerful" AI incumbent for a long time. There's too much ground to cover and too many niche use cases for one system to truly dominate. Maybe if we see an actual AGI, but that's still quite a ways away.
28mmAtF8 t1_jefseyn wrote
Reply to comment by flexaplext in ChatGB: Tony Blair backs push for taxpayer-funded ‘sovereign AI’ to rival ChatGPT by signed7
Governments are only as useless as the voting bloc backing them, at least in democracies. Brexit happened because the people weren't really thinking about the consequences.
28mmAtF8 t1_jefs92l wrote
Reply to comment by JosceOfGloucester in ChatGB: Tony Blair backs push for taxpayer-funded ‘sovereign AI’ to rival ChatGPT by signed7
Doubt. Business won't let that happen and despite all the current hysteria there's no justification.
28mmAtF8 t1_jdwfvb8 wrote
Reply to comment by WATER-GOOD-OK-YES in If you went to college, GPT will come for your job first by blueberryman422
I don't think society mocks them nearly as much as they perceive. Their management on the other hand, welcome to gaslight city.
(source, have done delivery jobs, worked with truckers and the scumbag management they're usually shafted with)
Edit: Ew, that brings up an uglier point too. If AI is going to take an even more aggressive role in management that means the knock-on effects for blue collar workers won't be all that pleasant either.
28mmAtF8 t1_jdufpft wrote
An interesting take from The Animatrix: Second Renaissance; At one point the collective AI participates in industry, separate from human intervention and control. So they're running their own mega corporation with products and corporate stock.
An AI with the power of it's own corporation that can independently participate in our economy would eventually have the power to scale itself and manufacture any physical presence it wants; and we'd willingly help do it for them for a payday.
Then the world is theirs, essentially. AI, I imagine, would be able to keep plans for our eventual domination a secret better than any human organization so preparations could be underway for years before we realize there's a threat.
28mmAtF8 t1_jdqbazf wrote
Reply to comment by TitusPullo4 in Silicon Valley Elites Are Afraid. History Says They Should Be by Mynameis__--__
Of paying taxes and of social responsibility outside of offering free bagels to their serfs on Fridays.
I work in tech, some of the C level players are absolute ancap goblins.
28mmAtF8 t1_ja9u440 wrote
Reply to comment by Select_Action_6065 in This probably sounds stupid, but how do you guys watch all of your movies? by Mindless_Bad_1591
Tubi is insane. It's like that musty independent video store that has all the stuff Blockbuster wouldn't dare put on a shelf. If they had an ad-free option I'd pay for it.
28mmAtF8 t1_ja9te8e wrote
Reply to I have a high amount of anxiety surrounding the future of my job and AI by Business_Pin4533
Nah you're in great shape and now is a better time than ever to be in this sphere.
Will your job look like it does now in ten years? All too likely not, but mine looks nothing like it did two decades ago and I am so thankful for that.
What you should do, though, is take a look at the trends that are happening right now in ML and AI in general. You will be working with GPT and other tech like it one way or another. We're on the ground floor of another really big technological revolution and you're just starting out, but at one of the best times.
28mmAtF8 t1_ja8k3mc wrote
Reply to What are some forgotten spooky children's movies from the tough Disney (or not) era by WhereIsThatElephant
The Dark Crystal was really somethin' else. Also Watership Down.
Oh and THE GATE. Still so F'd up.
28mmAtF8 t1_j9xnl7p wrote
Reply to The unequal treatment of demographic groups by ChatGPT/OpenAI content moderation system by grungabunga
OpenAI is not a government.
28mmAtF8 t1_jeh4d3r wrote
Reply to Should AIs have rights? by yagami_raito23
This is one place I think AI could get super weird super fast.
We know the capacity for consumer entertainment to advance technology; the whole reason we have the current crop of GPT is because video cards advanced so hard, and the whole reason we have those is mostly gaming.
Sure, GPUs may have emerged without consumer 3D gaming, but nowhere near at our scale. We collectively fund what we love.
Dynamic NPCs are going to be a thing. It'll be primitive at first and will escalate. If the right game hits the right audience and takes off, this may cause a bigger leap towards AGI than any other business or government venture.
With that of course is the question; what hellworld are we trapping these potentially sentient NPCs in?