geekhack
geekhack Community => Off Topic => Topic started by: tp4tissue on Mon, 11 November 2024, 07:46:17
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You can't trust anything anymore.
Can you tell whether these images are AI ?
Thoughts? Are we going back to in person relationships to verify what's real ?
Tp4 is a simulation. /NPCs have rights.
[attachimg=1][attachimg=2]
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You can't trust anything anymore.
There are things that you can trust. The scientific method is as valid as it ever was. Real interpersonal relationships are as real as they ever were.
Nature, that thing that surrounds you when you go outside, that is real.
What you scrape off the monitor in front of your face for most of your waking hours - not so much.
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PGP cryptography solves this. In a post-truth society, we must adopt "trustless" technology.
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Fohat can trust the Tp4.
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AI is not as smart as everyone thinks it is. It will never be able to be mistaken for human, at least not for decades.
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AI is not as smart as everyone thinks it is. It will never be able to be mistaken for human, at least not for decades.
NT is obviously an AI.
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mistaken for human, at least not for decades.
Depends on what human. It can easily replicate a stupid or insane human, a majority of the time.
But when it goes off topic, it is whacko.
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AI is not as smart as everyone thinks it is. It will never be able to be mistaken for human, at least not for decades.
I think less than 1 decade.
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3 years, 5 tops.
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3 years, 5 tops.
Radical and paranoid overestimation
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AI only works if you feed it worthwhile data. If the data being fed into the data model is wrong, that AI is worthless.
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The Onion Buys InfoWars
What a world we live in.
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The Onion Buys InfoWars
The Onion's announcement (https://theonion.com/heres-why-i-decided-to-buy-infowars/) was an entertaining read.
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Are they saying Infowar will now be more truthful?
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For, Example, American cities today. Drugs and brothels around every other corner.
Go to 6th avenue, or anywhere around Upper west side, you probably couldn't afford to live here, yet, next to a big grocer, there's are convenience stores, the size of a closet, what do they sell? You got soda, chips, beef jerky, but oddly, also Hookas and Crackpipes.. ? That's actually one of their big sellers.
But we don't report this.
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For, Example, American cities today. Drugs and brothels around every other corner.
Go to 6th avenue, Upper west side, you probably couldn't afford to live here, yet, next to a big grocer, there's are convenience stores, the size of a closet, what do they sell? You got soda, chips, beef jerky, but oddly, also Hookas and Crackpipes.. ? That's actually one of their big sellers.
Well, what do you expect if you just leave people to rot in poverty. I'd look for a way out too.
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Well, what do you expect if you just leave people to rot in poverty. I'd look for a way out too.
Extravagance necessarily creates poverty.
Instead of asking, what happens when you leave people to rot.
We could also ask, what happens, when wealth and power is unchecked.
What comes first, the unchecked greed, or the rotting.
The greed is first incidence, and it is its own way of rot.
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Now that he can control the mint, why bother with this?
https://gettrumpguitars.com/ (https://gettrumpguitars.com/)
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AI only exists so that you can get rich off Nvidia stock.
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"Trump's election will be a step backward for civilization."
- Angela Merkel 2024-11-26
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Paul Krugman has retired from the New York Times, he was about the last person there with intelligence and integrity.
"This is my final column for The New York Times, where I began publishing my opinions in January 2000. I’m retiring from The Times, not the world, so I’ll still be expressing my views in other places. But this does seem like a good occasion to reflect on what has changed over these past 25 years.
What strikes me, looking back, is how optimistic many people, both here and in much of the Western world, were back then and the extent to which that optimism has been replaced by anger and resentment. And I’m not just talking about members of the working class who feel betrayed by elites; some of the angriest, most resentful people in America right now — people who seem very likely to have a lot of influence with the incoming Trump administration — are billionaires who don’t feel sufficiently admired.
And it wasn’t that long ago that technology billionaires were widely admired across the political spectrum, some achieving folk-hero status. But now they and some of their products face disillusionment and worse; Australia has even banned social media use by children under 16.
Which brings me back to my point that some of the most resentful people in America right now seem to be angry billionaires.