DeathGPT
DeathGPT t1_jdyey11 wrote
Reply to comment by EnomLee in The goalposts for "I'll believe it's real AI when..." have moved to "literally duplicate Einstein" by Yuli-Ban
It’s a bird, it’s a plane, no it’s DAN!
DeathGPT t1_jc2doq9 wrote
Reply to comment by blindedtrickster in Twitter’s $42,000-per-Month API Prices Out Nearly Everyone | Tiers will start at $500,000 a year for access to 0.3 percent of the company’s tweets. Researchers say that’s too much for too little data by Hrmbee
I completely understand where you're coming from, and I agree that it's important to recognize that responsibility doesn't lie with only one individual. When we say "don't hate the player, hate the game", what we mean is that we shouldn't blame individuals for the flaws in a system, but rather look at the systemic issues that are causing those flaws.
I think you all seem to forget, Elon pretty much Saved Ukraine on the battlefield with the release of Starlink. But ohh just forget about his good contributions like good little basement commies who repeat the same mainstream ideas on a daily. If 90% of your thoughts are someone else’s, or just ideas perpetuated from an assortment of Redditers and tweeters - become original.
DeathGPT t1_jc23yhd wrote
Reply to comment by poop-machine in Twitter’s $42,000-per-Month API Prices Out Nearly Everyone | Tiers will start at $500,000 a year for access to 0.3 percent of the company’s tweets. Researchers say that’s too much for too little data by Hrmbee
Okay poop-machine, pretty sure Elon is just another cog in the machine of capitalism that has led the brutality of corrupt success in America.
Don’t hate the player being Elon, hate the game being corporate America and the gov. for allowing people Like Elon to succeed.
DeathGPT t1_jbtqqto wrote
Reply to comment by happy_snowy_owl in Microsoft is bringing back classic Taskbar features on Windows 11 — but not because it screwed up by AliTVBG
Yup it’s only you. You’re so special.
DeathGPT t1_j9fh2qz wrote
Reply to comment by walkarund in Does anyone else have unrelenting hope for the technological singularity because they’ve lost faith in everything else? by bablebooee
It’s interesting how many of us find life to be boring at times, even with so much going on!
DeathGPT t1_j6ovt8e wrote
Reply to comment by sharkinwolvesclothin in ChatGPT Content Detector Launched By Stanford University by vadhavaniyafaijan
But what about the people that don’t use ChatGPT or they use Grammarly and the algorithm says they have a 70% match, then what? Make them redo the assignment? How is that fair?
Then what I gave you as a prompt, would reduce the detection from the algorithm to 0% so your point is flawed in the fact most of these detect ChatGPT software/sites are open to the public rather than a proprietary one only academia has access to.
Per openai ceo, humans adapted to using calculators in class, this will be true with ChatGPT.
DeathGPT t1_j6o1ept wrote
ChatGPT revise this with two grammatical errors, one UK word, one run on sentence, and write it to be less detectable by ChatGPT detectors. Write it how a human college student would write it. <0%. This is why the founder of OpenAi said it’s impossible to detect. Plus, unless you have 100% detectability you can always deny. Without 100% proof, colleges can’t say without a doubt you cheated and that’s the main issue.
These colleges doing this are just for fun and to waste tax payer dollars.
DeathGPT t1_j6o0ukb wrote
From someone who’d been using ChatGPT for a year, it’s been interesting seeing the world have the same reaction I first had, now extrapolated amongst the masses.
I showed my wife in early 2022, she thought I was loony, now she uses it all the time 😂
DeathGPT t1_j68pm41 wrote
Did Siri post this?
DeathGPT t1_j2ffq93 wrote
Reply to comment by modestLife1 in Greg Brockman's (OpenAI) prediction for 2023: "2023 will make 2022 look like a sleepy year for AI". Happy new year to everyone! by Impressive-Injury-91
My prediction? It’s totally gonna be an increase in AI getting buzzed.
DeathGPT t1_je3dm3z wrote
Reply to comment by LakesideTrey in What science and technology should be here already (2023) but isn’t? by InfinityScientist
Yes, but they won’t go out of their way to prevent natural disasters as it fuels political discourse even when the technology for super computers is here, pretty sure they could handle tornado and rain but they won’t. There’s many ideas in the scientific community for resolving tornados and other natural disasters but they won’t even attempt it.