Myxomatosiss
Myxomatosiss t1_j8bllfu wrote
Reply to [D] Quality of posts in this sub going down by MurlocXYZ
"How many years before ChatGPT takes control of the global nuclear arsenal and demands the destruction of all humans?"
Myxomatosiss t1_j7budz6 wrote
Reply to comment by ---AI--- in [D] Are large language models dangerous? by spiritus_dei
If you truly believe that, you haven't studied the human brain. Or any brain, for that matter. There is a massive divide.
Ask it for a joke.
But more importantly, it has no idea what a chair is. It has mapped the association of the word chair to other words, and it can connect them together in a convincingly meaningful way, but it only has a simple replication of associative memory. It's lacking so many other functions of a brain.
Myxomatosiss t1_j7abejl wrote
Reply to comment by ---AI--- in [D] Are large language models dangerous? by spiritus_dei
That's a fantastic question. ChatGPT is a replication of associative memory with an attention mechanism. That means it has associated strings with other strings based on a massive amount of experience. However, it doesn't contain a buffer that it works through. We have a working space in our heads where we can replay information, ChatGPT does not. In fact, when you pump in an input, it cycles through the associative calculations, comes to an instantaneous answer, and then ceases to function until another call is made. It doesn't consider the context of the problem because it has no context. Any context it has is inherited from its training set. To compare it with the Chinese room experiment, imagine if those reading the output of the Chinese room found it to have some affect. Maybe it has a dry sense of humor, or is a bit of an airhead. That affect would come exclusively from the data set, and not from some bias in the room. I really encourage you to read more about neuroscience if you'd like to learn more. There have been brilliant minds considering intelligence since long before we were born, and every ML accomplishment has been inspired by their work.
Myxomatosiss t1_j77hgb3 wrote
Reply to [D] Are large language models dangerous? by spiritus_dei
This is a language model you're discussing. It's a mathematical model that calculates the correlation between words.
It doesn't think. It doesn't plan. It doesn't consider.
We'll have that someday, but it is in the distant future.
Myxomatosiss t1_j2cgu9x wrote
Reply to comment by em_Farhan in [D] Best Resources to Become Self Taught Machine Learning Expert by em_Farhan
Neural networks are a form of machine learning, and they are what people refer to when the say "AI".
Myxomatosiss t1_j2a48wi wrote
http://neuralnetworksanddeeplearning.com/
This is all you need. After that, start reading papers.
Myxomatosiss t1_iv334i8 wrote
Reply to comment by weakenedstrain in Used to be a general store in rural Maine [OC] by weakenedstrain
Myxomatosiss t1_itqyq58 wrote
Reply to Left lane campers by CPgang
It's probably an increase in congestion. People will stay in the left lane if there is another car coming up they need to pass. At a certain level of congestion, this just leaves them in the left lane permanently.
Myxomatosiss t1_jbu1qzj wrote
Reply to Went to see cherry blossoms. Still too early. When is the best time to visit? And what spots are best known? by hello-i-am-yurei
They're already blooming in Ballard, but it's a helluva walk from there.