Edmond Dantès

It belongs in a museum!
Member
Aug 24, 2022
5,555
UK
2JLRGDW6XVFK3BRIMXRPEMWY5Y.jpg


New chatbots capable of generating text and images from a few, simple prompts provide glimpses of how AI could change the workplace, education, superpower relations and our daily lives.
If you ask the ChatGPT artificial intelligence (AI) system a question about its own leading role in a technological revolution, the first part of its answer is fairly unimpressive: "It's underway and expected to have a significant impact on many sectors." But then ChatGPT goes on to say, "Its potential is enormous, but also raises ethical concerns." That's the feeling shared by most tech experts.

Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein more than 200 years ago, and humanity has been striving for decades to develop real-life artificial intelligence. But the launch of ChatGPT two months ago marks the first time an artificial intelligence system touched ordinary lives due to its ability to understand and respond to prompts written in ordinary sentences – natural language.

ChatGPT is still in its infancy and buggy – they call it a "research release" – but its enormous potential is astonishing. ChatGPT is just the first wave of a larger AI tsunami, with capabilities unimaginable just 10 years ago. Satya Nadella, Microsoft's chairman and CEO, said at the World Economic Forum's Annual Meeting in Davos on January 18 that we are witnessing "the emergence of a whole new set of technologies that will be revolutionary." Five days later, his company announced a second billion-dollar investment in OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT. The revolution Nadella envisions could affect almost every aspect of life and provide extraordinary benefits, along with some significant risks. It will transform how we work, how we learn, how nations interact, and how we define art. "AI will transform the world," concluded a 2021 report by the US National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence.
What does this new technology do?

The first rumblings of the revolution began just a few months ago with the widespread release of powerful AI systems trained on massive amounts of data that are capable of generating accurate, coherent text and spectacular images. To better understand and explain its potential, we conducted a few tests of ChatGPT. Using this system is different than doing a Google search because of the fluency of the response. When asked, "Who is Barack Obama?" ChatGPT replies:

Barack Obama is the 44th President of the United States, serving from 2009-2017. He is the first African American to hold the office.


Generated by ChatGPT.

But it can also conduct a conversation, and comprehends our instruction to provide an answer with emoticons and in language a 10-year-old can understand.

Barack Obama was the leader of America, the President! 🤴 He was the first Black person to be President. 😎


Generated by ChatGPT.

It is easy to imagine how useful this can be – what if Alexa or Siri were smarter? Or if you could talk to your laptop? We could ask Microsoft Word to summarize this article using a voice command. Or we could tell a web page, "I can't read this – make the font larger." ChatGPT is already capable of answering difficult questions. For example, a couple going through a divorce might ask for advice on how to tell their young daughter.

1. Be honest but age-appropriate: Explain the situation in simple terms that your daughter can understand, such as "Mommy and Daddy have decided we're not going to live together anymore, but we both still love you very much."

2. Emphasize that the divorce is not the child's fault: Reassure your daughter that she is not the reason for the divorce and that both parents still love her.

3. Encourage open communication: Let your daughter ask questions and encourage her to express her feelings about the situation. Listen to her and offer support.

4. Maintain stability: Try to keep routine and familiar activities as much as possible to provide a sense of stability and security for your daughter.

5. Seek outside help: Consider seeking the help of a therapist or counselor to help your daughter process the changes and cope with the emotions that may arise.
It's not hard to envision the strange future ahead. For example, an elderly person seeking help could ask, "I'm 80 years old and I don't understand Instagram, can you explain it to me?"

Instagram is a social media platform where users can share photos and videos, as well as interact with others through likes, comments, and direct messaging. It also has features such as filters and hashtags to organize and discover content. The app can be used on a smartphone or tablet, and is free to download and use.

Generated by ChatGPT.

ChatGPT has some obvious flaws and it's not a finished product, as co-creator Sam Altman readily admitted on Twitter: "It's incredibly limited, but good enough at some things to give a misleading impression of greatness... It does know a lot, but the danger is that it is confident and wrong a significant fraction of the time." Altman acknowledged the same serious limitation noted by other experts – ChatGPT hallucinates, makes up answers and fails to distinguish between what is real and what only appears to be real. Still, this is just the beginning. Microsoft's Nadella noted at the Davos meeting that the program is moving forward very quickly with "non-linear evolution," and demonstrates "an emerging capability."

New ChatGPT releases (GPT-4) and potential rivals are expected in the coming months. Google's DeepMind has a chatbot called Sparrow that might be unveiled soon. DeepMind was bought by Google in 2014 and has had several impressive AI successes in recent years. In 2015, it demonstrated the first AI system capable of beating a professional Go player. Last year, DeepMind's AlphaFold tool achieved AI's greatest scientific achievement to date by predicting the structure of almost every protein known to science, some of which are essential to understanding devastating diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.

The AI investments by Microsoft and Google are not spontaneous or one-off decisions, but the latest steps in a decade-long journey. Around 2010, neural network technology finally achieved some significant breakthroughs, and private investment in this field rose from $10 billion to $160 billion between 2013 and 2021.

The technology is backed by some serious scientific credentials. Three pioneers in the AI field – Yoshua Bengio, Geoffrey Hinton and Yann LeCun – won the Turing Award Prize in 2019, the top prize in computer science. In 2021, the same scientists and Demis Hassabis received Spain's Princess of Asturias award to individuals, entities or organizations who make notable achievements in the sciences, humanities, and public affairs. The AI systems emerging today are the tangible products of their ideas and theories.

A flood of new AI-enabled tools is anticipated. Many programmers already use Copilot, a virtual assistant that writes programming code based on natural-language instructions. Notion, a popular productivity and note-taking web application, now has the ability to summarize text, translate it to other languages, and suggest ideas.

There are also AI tools for creating images. We instructed one such tool, Midjourney, to "Draw a little boy in a red coat, standing with his back to the camera, looking at a large, streaming screen with a futuristic abstract frame, created with a digital charcoal brush and inspired by another image uploaded by Fran Pulido, our illustrator."
What kind of impact will it have?
Artificial intelligence has enormous potential, but it will bring with it all the turmoil inherent in transformative technologies and promises to disrupt our highly digitized lives. It will trigger competition in business and technology, and may upend geopolitical balances. AI many even reshape our concept of creativity. The European Union is one of the first global powers to begin developing legislation on the subject, and hopes to define the types of AI applications that present unacceptable risks. Objectionable AI applications include ones like China's system that ranks its citizens based on their "social credit." Others could include resume scanning systems that can lead to discrimination. Release of high-risk AI applications would require special authorization, while others would be subject to a liberal regulatory framework.

AI impacts on everyday life: a new human-machine interface

Algorithms have been proliferating rapidly for years, even if we don't see them. Netflix uses them to recommend programs and movies you may like. Electricity companies use them to predict energy demand, and Ikea uses them to forecast product demand and optimize its fleet of delivery vehicles. But the new artificial intelligence systems will be more visible in everyday life.

A major innovation of generative AI is that it can understand natural language and doesn't depend on a set of special commands. It has a deeper understanding of the words entered by users than the typical search engines and other systems of the past. Generative AI systems have been trained to understand and connect concepts like cheerful, ostrich, trap, or nineteenth century. They know what it means to summarize or explain, and can even perform a form of reasoning. They can respond by generating programming code or words. This is a monumental change. "It can become our main interface for interacting with machines," said Jean-Noël Barrot, France's Minister for Digital Transition and Telecommunications at the Davos meeting.

Perhaps the future lies in asking the computer what we want, like telling an ecommerce store that we're looking for a blue suit, but not that one – a suit for summer. Or we want a suit like the one that actor wore – what's his name? – he was in that movie about robbing casinos. In the future, when you read this article in the EL PAÍS app, you might be able to ask the app to read it out loud. Or you can ask it to clarify something in the article, like "What's Davos?"

Artificial intelligence also has the potential to help us create. We'll speak to Google Docs and tell it to make headings big and bold, or ask Excel to add a column with the population figures for each municipality. Or tell Photoshop to give everyone in the photo friendlier expressions.

"These artificial intelligence applications show that they know how to anticipate a user's intentions, which are often expressed in different terms and can be very vague," said Victoriano Izquierdo, the CEO of Graphext, an application for analyzing data that doesn't require users to learn special commands. "An application with a conversational back-and-forth style to specify requirements and clarify questions greatly improves the user experience."
AI impacts on business and the workplace:
The race is on. Not only are huge investments flowing into AI system development, but businesses in various industries are readying to incorporate AI into their operating mechanisms. In a recent interview with EL PAÍS, Jean-Marc Ollagnier, head of Accenture Europe, said that he believes the business world will undergo a revolution over the next 10 years that will be more dramatic than anything experienced since 1945, and AI will be a major driver of this transformation.

AI applications will extend capabilities and improve productivity to such an extent that the labor market will be heavily affected. New jobs will be created, others will be transformed, and some will become redundant and disappear. For the first time in human history, creative tasks could be automated. Jobs that involve solving complex problems, writing, advising, summarizing or providing examples will be impacted. Skilled positions may experience heavier impacts from AI than previous technological innovations. "We've gotten used to the idea that technological advances lead to the loss of blue-collar jobs, but now the prospect that white-collar jobs could be lost is quite disturbing," Nicole Sahin, CEO of G-P (a global recruiting and hiring platform) at the Davos meeting.

"It's possible that instead of needing five software engineers to write code, it will only take one really good engineer to review what an AI tool produces," Sahin said. Other workplaces could experience similar changes. When BuzzFeed's CEO told the news and entertainment company's staff this week that he intends to use OpenAI, the creator of ChatGPT, to develop content, the company's stock soared on the news. One can envision using AI tools in law firms to help master the large volume of legislation, court rulings and the legal canon. The list goes on and on. "The impacts are quite unpredictable. But what's clear is that everything is accelerating at the speed of light," said Sahin.

"It certainly has important implications for the workplace," said Barrot. "But I'm not in the pessimist's camp. I think these technologies, once they gain momentum, will enable people to focus on other tasks." If college professors can use a virtual assistant to send emails or develop a bibliography, perhaps they will have more time to research, design experiments, or simply think.

Priya Lakhani, the founder and head of AI-powered learning platform Century Tech, said, "On a scale of 1 to 10, the risk is minimal for anyone with an attitude and job that encourages constant learning. On the other hand, the risk is very high for anyone in a country or organization that doesn't care about how this technology could be disruptive. AI innovations could expand the digital divide even more."

Just like in the first stage of the digital revolution, AI has the potential for creating new businesses and jobs. The field of digital video today employs many more people than in the era of analog video – five minutes browsing YouTube will tell you that. But even when the net gain is positive, many people could still lose their jobs in the transition. Retraining and supporting those who are struggling with the change will be crucial in determining the net effect.
AI impacts on education:
Like other fields, the anticipated AI impacts on education are both encouraging and problematic. Free access to ChatGPT has sparked concern about students using it for their homework or exams. Cheating has many negative effects, like preventing the accurate assessment of educational achievement, skewing competitions for merit scholarships, and more.

Cheating aside, AI systems could detract from using the basic mental processes needed to develop the intellect, such as the refinement of thinking skills through writing exercises. What skills could be lost if they are not used? According to Carmen Torrijos, the loss of cognitive skills due to the emergence of an artificial process is nothing new. "We are still taught in school how to add, subtract and multiply, even though calculators have been around for many years. We start using them at a certain age and gradually lose the ability to do mental arithmetic, but never to a level that makes life difficult."

Despite some pitfalls, AI offers enormous educational potential for learning programs. They will be able to support teachers by relieving them of tasks that don't add value, and help students on their individual educational journeys. Private tutoring creates a degree of social inequality because wealthy families spend up to five times more on this service. AI can narrow this gap if used to create adaptive tutorials and books suitable for self-study, or to develop virtual tutors that can answer a student's questions.

In Davos, Century Tech's Lakhani felt that the time is right to push for change in education systems. "Some educators see this as an empowering and enabling force, but others are skeptical and afraid of the repercussions. I think there is a need for collaborative thinking by education professionals and legislators to move the system away from memorization-based models and more towards building critical minds," she said.

One limitation of ChatGPT is that it often provides responses with inaccurate information or that are difficult to verify. Other AI tools face the same challenge. But in the example below, Perplexity is able to answer a question in natural language and provide links to its sources of information.
AI impacts on geopolitics:
There is every indication that AI will play a prominent role in how countries will be able to conduct themselves on the international stage. This technology "will be a source of enormous power for the companies and countries that harness it," stated the report by the US National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence.

One of the main reasons is that control of AI technologies will generate wealth. In Davos, Nadella pointed out that a new generation of AI platforms with enormous business potential is emerging in transversal services like the major search engines, social networks and digital clouds. The wealth generated by businesses that know how to make the most of these technologies will have a cascading effect.

But AI will also establish the balance of power in other areas as well. It will be a significant factor in the evolution of military forces. The prospect of autonomous robot soldiers fighting wars is still a long way off, and no one is currently considering handing over nuclear launch capabilities to an AI system. But the world's major military forces have been studying how to incorporate this technology for some time.

AI will not only tip the scales in wealth accumulation and military capabilities, but it can also increase the risk of hybrid attacks, disruptions, and other harmful activity. Disinformation campaigns, cyberattacks, data collection, facial recognition and the like are already a significant problem, and may develop even more sophisticated capabilities that can disrupt democracies and consolidate internal control in authoritarian regimes.

It's a tight race right now. "China has the power, talent, and ambition to overtake the United States as the world leader in AI in the next decade if current dynamics don't change," warned the report by the US National Security Commission on Artificial Intelligence. The US restrictions on technology exports to China should be viewed as measures to thwart the Asian giant's progress in strategic sectors such as AI. For the moment, the EU seems to be lagging behind in the AI and digital races.
english.elpais.com

ChatGPT is just the beginning: Artificial intelligence is ready to transform the world

New chatbots capable of generating text and images from a few, simple prompts provide glimpses of how AI could change the workplace, education, superpower relations and our daily lives


Well worth reading the full article.
 

Tagyhag

Member
Oct 27, 2017
12,719
For better or worse (most likely worse) this is going to be the year of AI.

And it's just going to get weirder from there. Buckle up folks.
 

super-famicom

Avenger
Oct 26, 2017
25,402
AI teachers? Yeah, I can't trust that one bit. Each student is unique and learns at a different pace and there's no way an AI can handle that in an effective manner. Plus, what are the odds that the people training the AI aren't going to introduce racism and other bullshit to it?
 

wwm0nkey

Member
Oct 25, 2017
15,678
ChatGPT ruined google for me, but I can not imagine it getting anywhere close to replacing teachers
 

Jubilant Duck

Member
Oct 21, 2022
6,201
"It's possible that instead of needing five software engineers to write code, it will only take one really good engineer to review what an AI tool produces," Sahin said.
Result: you reach a point one day where you realise you don't have enough "really good" engineers because you've erased the pipeline for them to learn the ropes.

Happens in every industry that tries to eliminate lesser roles and just have the experienced senior people oversee stuff - one day shit hits the fans and you need extra human bodies but they're not available.

TV production world got absolutely fucked during lockdown due to a lack of production coordinators, as for years the push had been for production managers to just take on that "junior" workload to reduce costs.
 

Wrexis

Member
Nov 4, 2017
21,523
"It's possible that instead of needing five software engineers to write code, it will only take one really good engineer to review what an AI tool produces,"

This is a slight exaggeration, but not by much.

Graduates and interns are the ones that will be worst affected by this. Why hire someone that will need a year of handholding anymore?
 

Proteus

Member
Oct 25, 2017
8,001
Toronto
This is reminding me a lot of the internet in the early to mid-90s. It's going to explode in the next few years. Jobs will be displaced and industries will transform.

No one is ready for this.
 

wwm0nkey

Member
Oct 25, 2017
15,678
Result: you reach a point one day where you realise you don't have enough "really good" engineers because you've erased the pipeline for them to learn the ropes.

Happens in every industry that tries to eliminate lesser roles and just have the experienced senior people oversee stuff - one day shit hits the fans and you need extra human bodies but they're not available.

TV production world got absolutely fucked during lockdown due to a lack of production coordinators, as for years the push had been for production managers to just take on that "junior" workload to reduce costs.
The funniest thing I have seen suggested is replacing programming teams with ChatGPT and like 1 dude. ChatGPT is nice, but lmao thinking it throws out the correct idea all the time
 

Aaronrules380

Avenger
Oct 25, 2017
22,618
AI is a monumental technology that can lead us to utopia or dystopia just as easily depending on how we respond to it's emergence
 

ezekial45

Member
Oct 25, 2017
6,852
This is a slight exaggeration, but not by much.

Graduates and interns are the ones that will be worst affected by this. Why hire someone that will need a year of handholding anymore?
Yeah, it's going to make joining companies a lot more difficult now for people in need of work experience. I truly believe younger people are going to be most impacted by this, it's gonna really fuck with Gen Z in particular.
 

Dice

Member
Oct 25, 2017
22,939
Canada
For all the good it can do, it's this shit that worries me most:

AI will not only tip the scales in wealth accumulation and military capabilities, but it can also increase the risk of hybrid attacks, disruptions, and other harmful activity. Disinformation campaigns, cyberattacks, data collection, facial recognition and the like are already a significant problem, and may develop even more sophisticated capabilities that can disrupt democracies and consolidate internal control in authoritarian regimes.

Having any amount of power (be it as a World Leader or Shift Manager) is already perilous enough sometimes.
 

Conciliator

Member
Oct 25, 2017
5,177
yep...kinda wondering, incidentally, if I can invest in something like ChatGPT, or another entity that seems to be on the cutting edge of the same path?

This is a slight exaggeration, but not by much.

Graduates and interns are the ones that will be worst affected by this. Why hire someone that will need a year of handholding anymore?

also yep...AI is not going to be replacing software engineers(at least, not in the near-to-mid future), but it could dramatically change our workflow, culture, and industry in the coming years

who knows if all this shit will do more harm than good in total...I have no idea

EDIT: also true that there's some debate to be had on what really constitutes "AI" and if this should count. Practically, though, doesn't matter...people will call it AI, and it's going to be an increasingly big deal.
 

Mezentine

Member
Oct 25, 2017
10,013
Can we please please please stop calling this stuff AI? Its Machine Learning. Normally I'm not pedantic about this but I think that calling stuff like this Artificial Intelligence is actively damaging, in that it creates misleading perceptions of what is effectively a piece of industrial machinery, the next generation productivity tool

I continue to remain very underimpressed with even chat-GPT. Its a good party trick but its output is only good for actually applying to life if what you're looking for is a bunch of text slurry (I guess its cool that it can write some code)
 

Aaronrules380

Avenger
Oct 25, 2017
22,618
AI teachers? Yeah, I can't trust that one bit. Each student is unique and learns at a different pace and there's no way an AI can handle that in an effective manner. Plus, what are the odds that the people training the AI aren't going to introduce racism and other bullshit to it?
I mean it's not possible now but AI will improve. People need to accept that we're getting to a point where in the not too distant future AI (not in the next few decades probably, but like within a century or two) will be better than humans at pretty much everything, because they can devote all their resources to learning how to accomplish a speciifc task at a rate humans can't compete with. As for racism, it's absolutely a risk we need to be cognizant of, but it's worth keeping in mind human teachers can be just as racist so that's a risk that exists with or without AI
 

Tomacco

Member
Oct 27, 2017
1,011
AI teachers? Yeah, I can't trust that one bit. Each student is unique and learns at a different pace and there's no way an AI can handle that in an effective manner.
Treating each student differently based on their own attributes (ie marks, strengths, etc) is one of the areas that AI would be vastly superior to human teachers.

Plus, what are the odds that the people training the AI aren't going to introduce racism and other bullshit to it?
Very true, which is why we will need very strict oversight on this. TBH much stricter oversight then the lacking system we have for existing teachers. If you think that racism isn't rampant in the current system, I've got a bridge to sell you.
 

Dodongo

Member
Oct 25, 2017
7,481
Remember when we thought the internet would lead to greater collective understanding, but instead it was used to create a capitalist hellscape? That's what I expect from AI.

Either way, it's going to change everything, and soon.
 

Nothing Loud

Literally Cinderella
Member
Oct 25, 2017
10,040
Didn't read the whole article but I didn't see it comment on AI's potential on tech and medicine so I'll just copy paste what I posted in the other AI thread:

AI is incredibly important for human society and progress and I guess I'm not surprised at the amount of FUD going on about it recently but it's not helpful without the bright side of context regarding AI.

I'm a computational biologist, I use and develop AI in my research and job. The newest algorithms, neural network models, and data science techniques, yes, are being used for profit motive to extract and interpret more and more personal data to sell a product. That's the capitalistic hell we live in. But we can't stunt progress because of this fear.

Researchers use these latest algorithms, techniques and models not just to figure out what color shirt you like to wear and advertise to you on instagram, but also to cure incurable diseases and provide modern technological advances.

An easy example is how one of my professors used state of the art AI to predict hypoxia and cardiac events during anesthesia nearly 10 minutes before an anesthesiologist knows it will happen. Live. By reading patient vitals data during anesthesia. Does this have concerns for automation? Yes, like any human technology advance. But the key here is that it can do certain tasks better than humans, or impossible for humans, and we can leverage this and retrain our own skills to reduce human suffering and labor and increase quality of life and leisure for humans.

AI is pretty much the standard right now in de novo protein design, meaning it is the state of the art in designing medicine and vaccines. Pfizer and Moderna undoubtedly used AI in computational protein design (I have some experience in this) to design the protein folding problem and rapidly prototype candidates that otherwise would have taken years of testing for the vaccine design of the COVID-19 vaccine. The lives saved by that vaccine directly compete with the "bad utility" people fear AI will cause.

So I'm just here to say: don't forget that with its risks, AI also has tremendous benefits in getting us to other planets (AI in outer space travel aeronautics), solving human disease (I can cite several examples), creating green energy and climate change/food engineering solutions (computational chemistry and rapid AI tech prototyping), modern travel options/vehicles safety, I mean the list goes on and on.

To answer your question: AI started in data science which was primarily started with basic linear regression almost 100 years ago. Then after the 60s regression got advanced and in the 80s/90s we entered supervised and unsupervised learning which then led to the first popular neural networks and modern AI in data science. You're only hearing about it recently because it takes like 20-40 years for academic research to become laymen's affordable/accessible technology. Well we're here today and it's not going away, the latest AI developments at the academic level, when it hits the ease and affordability bracket of 20-40 years from now, is not only going to cure several previously incurable diseases and create the safest, smartest transportation in society ever, it will help us solve climate change issues. It will also delete jobs and cause cheating/dishonesty scandals though, so that's something to definitely deal with as it comes along.
 

Mezentine

Member
Oct 25, 2017
10,013
Remember when we thought the internet would lead to greater collective understanding, but instead it was used to create a capitalist hellscape? That's what I expect from AI.
Yes. My expectations from this so-called "AI revolution" are rock bottom. I expect it to make both the internet and the workplace significantly shittier
 

Berry Pie

Member
Nov 29, 2022
1,287
If this means we can ultimately get some robot/AI referees in the NBA, I guess there will be a silver lining to our new hell.
 

signal

Member
Oct 28, 2017
40,349
"Transform the world" by giving capitalists more money and MGS2-related areas. Wake me up when it solves climate change or something.
 

Deleted member 128704

Account closed at user request
Banned
Dec 6, 2022
367
Why? The whole point of prompts is that it seems to equalize the talent inputting whatever.
Fucking managers can do that if they really wanted to. Hell, the building janitor could.

You are totally dismissing the importance of prompting going forward in my opinion. In the future there will be university and college courses devoted to crafting prompts across a wide array of AI models.
 

Boy

Member
Apr 24, 2018
4,631
Like i said in another topic. I think a.i will be a major help in the health industry like finding cures for diseases like cancer, etc..

There's definitely a paradigm shift coming, and it's scary at the same time exciting.
 

Dice

Member
Oct 25, 2017
22,939
Canada
You are totally dismissing the importance of prompting going forward in my opinion. In the future there will be university and college courses devoted to crafting prompts across a wide array of AI models.

Oh, developing yeah. Sorry misunderstood

Like i said in another topic. I think a.i will be a major help in the health industry like finding cures for diseases like cancer, etc..

TBH I think I have a better chance of AI listening to health problems better than some doctors I've seen 👍🙄
 

wingkongex

Member
Aug 25, 2019
2,211
also yep...AI is not going to be replacing software engineers(at least, not in the near-to-mid future),

Granted I am not a software engineer but I don't understand this sentiment. GPT can write and clean up code to an acceptable degree already, and it's in its infancy. How is this not a concern for software engineers?
 

super-famicom

Avenger
Oct 26, 2017
25,402
As for racism, it's absolutely a risk we need to be cognizant of, but it's worth keeping in mind human teachers can be just as racist so that's a risk that exists with or without AI

Very true, which is why we will need very strict oversight on this. TBH much stricter oversight then the lacking system we have for existing teachers. If you think that racism isn't rampant in the current system, I've got a bridge to sell you.

Oh I am aware that there are racist teachers in schools today. But the idea of programming an AI and then just making it racist (because the GOP could be the ones to contract that job out) disgusts me.
 

Orayn

Member
Oct 25, 2017
11,182
We should be treating this shit like Dune or Warhammer 40K but we won't realize that until it's too late. (Also like Dune and 40K)
 

Nothing Loud

Literally Cinderella
Member
Oct 25, 2017
10,040
Can we please please please stop calling this stuff AI? Its Machine Learning. Normally I'm not pedantic about this but I think that calling stuff like this Artificial Intelligence is actively damaging, in that it creates misleading perceptions of what is effectively a piece of industrial machinery, the next generation productivity tool

I continue to remain very underimpressed with even chat-GPT. Its a good party trick but its output is only good for actually applying to life if what you're looking for is a bunch of text slurry (I guess its cool that it can write some code)

Sorry but…this is wrong. The definition of machine learning includes that it is a form of applied AI (artificial intelligence)…

It also is not just a party trick, if you're commenting on AI or ML in general
 

Kouriozan

Member
Oct 25, 2017
21,334
I didn't think I would witness the end if Humanity in my lifetime.
Little by little, this will render a lot of jobs obsolete.
 

Joe

Member
Oct 25, 2017
8,714
It's going to be a rough transition, but I'm excited to see the sort of world that new AI tools will help bring about. I definitely wish I could skip ahead a few decades over the rough period. It's going to be terrifying and fascinating to watch.
 

NCR Ranger

Member
Oct 25, 2017
5,930
People forget that often in tech the last 10 percent is 90 percent of the work. Sure we have stuff like ChatGPT that can do some cool stuff, but we are also vastly underestimating how long it will take to get from what we have now to replacing teachers, programmers, or what not. I would be very worried if say i was still doing phone surveys and reading from a script with strict instuctions to not deviate. I am less worried about my current job going before I retire.
 

Aaronrules380

Avenger
Oct 25, 2017
22,618
I feel like being pessimistic here is useless because it accomplishes nothing. There's not really a way to prevent the rise of AI, it's happening sooner or later so the real focus should be making reforms that allow AI to revolutionize the world for the better rather than turn it into a hellscape. This is something we need to be putting as a high priority for policy making right now. Instead of talking about how AI will be awful, we need to be having discussions on what sorts of policies can be put in place to prevent those outcomes, to ensure it works to create a more equitable society rather than a less equitable one. I feel like too many of these discussions have people being mired by pessimism or a fear of change, or an innate need to assert how special we as humans are and thus AI is inevitably a problem to these people. AI can bring about utopia, but this will take an active effort on our part. Stopping AI is impossible, because bad actors will continue to research it to their own benefit no matter what, and rather than letting them monopolize the technology and assure their hegemony we need to be working to make it work for everyone right now before it's too late
 

louie

Member
Oct 29, 2017
559
We had a company talk today. Decisions will be made soon on whether we can cut back on writers and just use chatgpt instead. We were able to generate copy for email, websites, and social media that was deemed good enough. Instead of multiple writers, we now only need one person to make sure what we get from chatgpt is good enough for release. We work with a few authors, and we have already cloned their voices.

The writers will just the first people to go, I assume. I knew it was only a small matter of time before it threatened my job, but I didn't expect it to be so quick.

I survived the first round of recent tech layoffs, but I'm not so confident for my future. A.I can basically already do my job.
 

Night

Late to the party
Member
Nov 1, 2017
5,262
Clearwater, FL
I mentioned it in another thread, but AI is more than just deepfakes, voice replication, and art generation. It's going to help solve complex equations and problems that will lead to huge advancements for the human race.
 

mbpm

Member
Oct 25, 2017
24,077
Inb4 we solve the "lonely man" crisis by providing AI sexbots for everyone so they never have to encounter anyone real
 

Zekes

Member
Oct 25, 2017
6,803
I picked the worst time to start learning programming to change careers huh
 

Scuffed

Member
Oct 28, 2017
11,218
Tech jobs will be torched by AI. Every incremental advancement will cost more jobs in that sector. There will be a lot of pain incoming.