Peribanu
Peribanu t1_j9slh3f wrote
Reply to And Yet It Understands by calbhollo
I was reading the linked article, and I opened the Bing sidebar to search for something, when I found that Bing had already (without prompting) provided a summary:
Welcome back! Here are some takeaways from this page.
- The author argues that GPT shows genuine understanding of human languages, not just parroting or lookup tables, and challenges the mainstream view that denies this possibility.
- GPT is able to follow instructions in different languages, even after being finetuned in English, which suggests that it has abstracted concepts from its training data and can map them across languages.
- The author criticizes the dismissive analogies used for AI systems like GPT, which he says are based on false security and ignorance, and urges people to change their minds in response to the surprising evidence of GPT’s capabilities.
Peribanu t1_j9qr33r wrote
Reply to comment by Hodoss in And Yet It Understands by calbhollo
There are many more such examples posted in r/bing.
Peribanu t1_ja9sy5m wrote
Reply to comment by EmergentSubject2336 in What technology can we expect 200 years from now in the year 2223? by AdorableBackground83
So humans are literally the only civilization in the near-infinite Universe ever to approach singularity? Surely we would have detected such huge technological structures, communications technologies, etc., by now, if this Utopian/dystopian future were the inevitable outcome of technological development (Fermi paradox / Great Filter hypothesis)... It seems much more likely to me that we're telling ourselves stories influenced by the myth that intelligence must lead to infinite and exponential technological expansion. What if super intelligence in fact leads to the establishment of a just society that lives in harmony with the earth, its resources and its ecosystems?