

We must, indeed, all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.


South Korea is feeling threatened by China, and is worried that the US has become an unreliable partner, so they are making a political move that doesn’t involve much direct risk to themselves.
South Korea is feeding a crocodile.


And yet, somehow Microsoft can’t figure out how to monetize video games.
I would like to live on the cheese coast.


Definitely sarcasm.


God forbid I have to talk to other people in public.


Ah, no, see if you demonstrate any capacity for troubleshooting printers you fail the intelligence test.


Gas tank fills in 5 minutes if you are empty and have a large tank to fill, otherwise less. Also, if I know that I am going to be away from gas stations for awhile (camping, offroading) I can fill up my can and carry that with me.

You’ll never get me, narc.


Not the policies, but certainly activists like Greta Thunberg have been characterized as angry extremists (by people who are financially interested in maintaining the status quo).


I am posting it here because the whole thing is built around privacy
it is not end to end encrypted.
The server can read what is stored, on purpose.
So, data is not encrypted at rest or in transit.
privacy

Also, to be clear, anonymity is not privacy.


Language models are not databases and they are not markov bots (similar function but work directly using statistical word association maps).
Except that it’s been demonstrated multiple times that original training data can be extracted from a language model, so it is completely valid to talk about the model as a database, because the training data is stored within it.
Here’s a broad survey of more than 100 research papers demonstrating this: Training Data Extraction From Pre-trained Language Models: A Survey
There is much more uncertainty about what is going on under the hood.
So, this is a good anology in this case.
See, I know how an internal combustion engine works. I don’t know, by looking at the hood of a particular vehicle, how exactly a specific car’s engine operates (maybe it has 4 cylinders, or 6 or 8, maybe it has fuel injectors, maybe it has a carburetor, etc). However, I do know that the principles are the same for all internal combustion engines, and that just because I don’t know the details of how a particular engine operates, that does not mean that its operation is beyond my understanding.
The same is true for machine learning models. There may be uncertainty as to how a particular model operates “under the hood”, but the principles of operation are the same for all, and are not incomprehensible.
The main thing we can really know is that ultimately a human mind is a computer
We actually don’t know this. This is called computationalism. It is speculative, there are several alternative theories, and little in the way of experimental evidence supporting any particular theory.
The idea that they are “just statistical models” and this knowledge can be used to say what is impossible for them from philosophical first principles keeps getting repeated but has never worked in practice. The reality is that no one knows enough to say for sure where the line is.
You have to understand, the current branch of machine learning models grew out of algorithms whose purpose was processing large data sets with thousands or millions of variables and optimizing for areas in the data set where many of those variables were maximized (or minimized). Here’s a better explanation:
Hill Climbing Algorithm & Artificial Intelligence - Computerphile
How these tools perform their optimization, and what they optimize for, has been recombined in different ways to produce different types of models, and the search space of variables has been expanded with increased computing power, but the underlying operating principles are still the same. This is not a tool that can comprehend what it is doing, it can’t be self-aware. It can only process large amounts of input data and attempt to maximize for particular dimensions. This seems vague to humans because the amount of variables being handled at any given time is far more than a human mind can focus on, but that doesn’t make the optimization routine intelligent or conscious. It’s just doing a lot of number crunching really fast, optimizing for specific aspects as directed by its developers.


One of the most widely commented things about DNNs is that we don’t really understand them completely. I don’t know how you would miss that if you knew anything about AI at all.
No one who actually works on digital neural networks thinks this. We may not be able to predict the behavior of a particular neural network with certainty (because there are a lot, like millions, of variables), but that does not mean that we don’t understand how they work.
Which part of the brain do you think is impossible to simulate with maths?
simulation ≠ reality


Idealistic to the point of absurdity.
Your heart’s in the right place, but your mind isn’t.
No no, that’s TempleOS
" … a biblical-themed lightweight operating system (OS) designed to be the Third Temple from the Hebrew Bible. It was created by American computer programmer Terry A. Davis, who developed it alone over the course of a decade after a series of manic episodes that he later described as a revelation from God."
Escalator brake failures can be a real problem:
Boston, 2021
Rome, 2018
Hong Kong, 2017