helopigs

joined 1 year ago
[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

the issue is that foreign companies aren't subject to US copyright law, so if we hobble US AI companies, our country loses the AI war

I get that AI seems unfair, but there isn't really a way to prevent AI scraping (domestic and foreign) aside from removing all public content on the internet

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

Sorry for the late reply - work is consuming everything :)

I suspect that we are (like LLMs) mostly "sophisticated pattern recognition systems trained on vast amounts of data."

Considering the claim that LLMs have "no true understanding", I think there isn't a definition of "true understanding" that would cleanly separate humans and LLMs. It seems clear that LLMs are able to extract the information contained within language, and use that information to answer questions and inform decisions (with adequately tooled agents). I think that acquiring and using information is what's relevant, and that's solved.

Engaging with the real world is mostly a matter of tooling. Real-time learning and more comprehensive multi-modal architectures are just iterations on current systems.

I think it's quite relevant that the Turing Test has essentially been passed by machines. It's our instinct to gatekeep intellect, moving the goalposts as they're passed in order to affirm our relevance and worth, but LLMs have our intellectual essence, and will continue to improve rapidly while we stagnate.

There is still progress to be made before we're obsolete, but I think it will be just a few years, and then it's just a question of cost efficiency.

Anyways, we'll see! Thanks for the thoughtful reply

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 3 points 2 weeks ago

niche communities are still struggling due to the chicken-and-egg problem (and reddit dominance), but it's improving

if there is a party, it's about lemmy's inevitable growth amidst reddit enshittification

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 1 points 3 weeks ago (2 children)

relative to where we were before LLMs, I think we're quite close

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 30 points 3 weeks ago

the extent that Trump has gone to remove barriers to committing atrocities likely corresponds to the extent he intends to commit them

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago

Peer to peer.

I've spent a bit of time developing some related ideas, but haven't had time to start building it.

It's a bit rough still, but I'd love some feedback! https://freetheinter.net/

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 7 points 2 months ago

we have to use trust from real life. it's the only thing that centralized entities can't fake

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 4 points 2 months ago

I think we have to build systems that use real-life interpersonal trust networks so that centralized entities cannot just outspend and bot their way to prominence.

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 7 points 2 months ago (2 children)

I think the key is building a social information system based on connections we have in real life. Key exchange parties, etc

It's the only way to introduce a prohibitively high cost to centralized broadcast and reduce the power of these mega-entities

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

that would be awesome, assuming they're all evil, but destroys the principle of faith

I'm pretty sure that the ruse, if there is one, must be impossible to prove

[–] helopigs@lemmy.world 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

the principal hypothesis of the bitcoin experiment is that a central ledger and issuer is not actually necessary, and it's still going strong

central banks are a hell of a lot better than the hodgepodge that arose in the 1800s, but it's not proven that they will outlast an adequately designed decentralized implementation (whether it's bitcoin or something else)

there are plenty of problems down the road for bitcoin, but there are arguably more for central banks. can a centralized currency survive the failure of its backing empire?

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