that's actually a task they're very good at, and fairly easy to be coerced into performing.

that's actually a task they're very good at, and fairly easy to be coerced into performing.

Ah, thank you!zompist wrote: ↑Sat May 24, 2025 5:29 pmThere' some good information in this r/askhistorians thread. Basically: we are always finding new manuscripts; there's a backlog; transcription/translation is required; it's a difficult process (you do not want to manhandle a half-millennium-old manuscript).
If we go back to cuneiform, the backlog is humongous— hundreds of thousands of tablets.
With manuscripts, there's also the question of variability. E.g. there is no one Egyptian Book of the Dead. There are about 3000 versions, all different in their selection of material. They copy from each other but no one manuscript is 'complete'. If we find a new one, there's always a chance it's different in a way interesting to scholars. Well, a very very small subset of scholars.
Thank you!
Agreed. and the "that's a human" tests they can pass are kind of the thing with he most potential to cause harm about them for me, tbh. eventually, the internet will be 50% ai slop. 80% ai slop. 99.99999% ai slop, and then it will be unusable: you'll google what's the capital of burundi and get infinite ai generated listicles about the importance of capitals and knowing geography, each shilling for a different integrated AI experience where you'll learn about geography for only 99.999 bezosbucks.These are all good points. The thing is, humans have not till now had to deal with things with the particular set of capabilities and deficits that LLMs have. They trigger the "that's a human" tests that worked when we were only dealing with humans vs. animals. Then they do stuff that equally triggers the "that's not a human" tests.
It's like the Law of Cybernetic Etymology ("there's always one more bug"): there are always more books to be digitised.
I assume you mean the Law of Cybernetic Entomology.alice wrote: ↑Sun May 25, 2025 2:10 pmIt's like the Law of Cybernetic Etymology ("there's always one more bug"): there are always more books to be digitised.
That sounds quite sophisticated to me. Surely people here would concede that detecting the demographics of their user and tailoring their response accordingly qualifies as some form of intelligence.zompist wrote: ↑Mon May 26, 2025 3:57 pmInteresting article on what AIs know about their users.
LLMs make assumptions about the person they're dealing with (gender, socioeconomic status, etc.), and respond differently based on that.
Sure...its up there with a dog being able to distinguish between its owner and its housesitter - and adjusting canine behavior accordingly.malloc wrote: ↑Mon May 26, 2025 8:00 pmThat sounds quite sophisticated to me. Surely people here would concede that detecting the demographics of their user and tailoring their response accordingly qualifies as some form of intelligence.zompist wrote: ↑Mon May 26, 2025 3:57 pmInteresting article on what AIs know about their users.
LLMs make assumptions about the person they're dealing with (gender, socioeconomic status, etc.), and respond differently based on that.
some form sure... but then again, plants also have some sort of intelligence in that they react to their environment, signal stuff to each other, seduce bugs into visiting them etcetera.malloc wrote: ↑Mon May 26, 2025 8:00 pmThat sounds quite sophisticated to me. Surely people here would concede that detecting the demographics of their user and tailoring their response accordingly qualifies as some form of intelligence.zompist wrote: ↑Mon May 26, 2025 3:57 pmInteresting article on what AIs know about their users.
LLMs make assumptions about the person they're dealing with (gender, socioeconomic status, etc.), and respond differently based on that.
Code: Select all
10 IF INPUT$ == "AYE" THEN GO TO 40
20 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 1
30 GO TO 50
40 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 0
50 REM continue in like mannerThat doesn't account for the existence of people from Northern/the North of Ireland.alice wrote: ↑Tue May 27, 2025 2:35 pm It isn't much more complicated than this:
Code: Select all
10 IF INPUT$ == "AYE" THEN GO TO 40 20 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 1 30 GO TO 50 40 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 0 50 REM continue in like manner
Somebody is thinking in C even when they're thinking in BASICalice wrote: ↑Tue May 27, 2025 2:35 pm It isn't much more complicated than this:
Code: Select all
10 IF INPUT$ == "AYE" THEN GO TO 40 20 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 1 30 GO TO 50 40 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 0 50 REM continue in like manner
I believe Alice is behaving in the time honoured British tradition¹ of ignoring Northern Ireland in the vain hope all Northern Ireland related problems will somehow go away. See also: BrexitRaphael wrote: ↑Tue May 27, 2025 2:39 pmThat doesn't account for the existence of people from Northern/the North of Ireland.alice wrote: ↑Tue May 27, 2025 2:35 pm It isn't much more complicated than this:
Code: Select all
10 IF INPUT$ == "AYE" THEN GO TO 40 20 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 1 30 GO TO 50 40 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 0 50 REM continue in like manner
I'm not sure I follow -- surely it can be edited easily for N.Ireland and Mann, or Wales.Raphael wrote: ↑Tue May 27, 2025 2:39 pmThat doesn't account for the existence of people from Northern/the North of Ireland.alice wrote: ↑Tue May 27, 2025 2:35 pm It isn't much more complicated than this:
Code: Select all
10 IF INPUT$ == "AYE" THEN GO TO 40 20 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 1 30 GO TO 50 40 LET IS_PROBABLY_SCOTTISH = 0 50 REM continue in like manner
It can, but it wasn't.
It seems that despite taking the strongest line against AI here, I am also the only one willing to credit it with intelligence. All skepticism aside, these LLMs are clearly reacting to subtle cues that their users belong to particular demographics, such as word choice and expressed concerns, and adjusting their responses accordingly. Undoubtedly it all amounts to statistical patterns, like men and women slightly favoring different synonyms or something, but doesn't make it any less impressive.
Did you read the article? Because it wasn't subtle cues at all.
screaming "we're all gonna die! AI will kill and replace us all!" is not taking a strong line.
that should tell you something.I am also the only one willing to credit it with intelligence.