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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: August 21st, 2024

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  • not intrinsically, at least not for long. in most of europe it was legal up until the 90s and there were even porno mags that ran specials.

    …i do compulsive late night wiki walks, before you ask how i know that. i had a period where i read up on what happened to the “flower power” generation with all their “free love” stuff and that came up. i tend to do breadth-first search so i just read through articles while opening all the links in the background, then go down a level, etc etc. when a term like that comes up on a wiki page it triggers your fight-or-flight response.



  • oh i am anti as all hell. i have knowledge of how the models tend to work, how the training is done, and how reasoning and tool use is implemented. that’s why i never use online models and check the datasets of local ones.

    but like… the idea isn’t bad. it’s just that the way people use it is to steal information, burn through massive resources, and atrophy their knowledge. just like how the idea of a block chain, or a uniquely identifiable digital token, isn’t intrinsically bad, but the biggest use was grifting.

    a model trained on consensually acquired data, using only renewable energy, run locally, can still achieve useful things like quickly finding information from a loose query, doing bulk edits, making templates and placeholders, or offering suggestions. it’s just that it would take longer and not be hype-worthy. so no for-profit entity does it. that’s what makes projects like the ai horde interesting.










  • i refuse to use ml models for code. the copyright issues alone should be enough to keep them away from every public code base until the matter is settled. but also because local tooling is, frankly, shit. i have a bit of hope for text diffusion models, but i have a hard time seeing the situation improving because everyote is full in on cloud models now.





  • i think the first qiestion i have is, what use do you see in this? because… it’s a readme file. it’s written once, maybe updated when the build process changes, but it’s generally static. what’s more, it has no required sections, many projects don’t need examples, and most things on the big forges don’t have links. it’s just a freeform document. it doesn’t even have to be markdown. rst is pretty common as well, as is plaintext. are you suggesting a tool that can parse a file of unknown format and figure out whether it contains predefined structures?


  • you know, i’ve tried to defend some usage in the past, explaining my processes and the many steps of manual refinement, masking, and layerwork i put in to things, how i only run local models with open weights, how all my power comes from hydro etc etc

    but as the tools keep evolving i’ve realised nobody else seems to actually care about the process. the pro-people just want as much slop as possible. someone likened it to a slot machine, where you keep pulling just because. that’s where we are now.