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> Is that sharks are an ancient species

For a shark lover, you should know that shark is not a species, but a taxonomy group.

From there, everything else you assume is incorrect (ie: some species of sharks have definitely gone extinct)


What the hell does "fewer products" even mean?

Why do you present your second paragraph as if it were a reasonable solution to anything?

It's a kindergartners view on troubleshooting an unfathomably complex issue.

"Well just raise taxes and fix that!"


"Carbon Credits"??

Nowadays the former seems to be a requirement for the latter, so I'm inclined to agree with you

"I fixed the stupidly complicated tabletop game with an even more complicated piece of software! Now you can be confused and not have to look at human faces while you furiously type away at the computer in order to prove to the DM that the ridiculous loophole that you found in the rules is actually logically consistent"

I'm worse than you: the quotes are what drive me insane:

> . “HP never exceeds max”

I think it's because its such a braindead thing to fix that when I see them, it's clear the "author" hasn't even read their own "work".

Like, you're not even trying to hide it at the laziest level possible. Blegh.

(See how you can tell a human wrote that?)


The way things are headed, people with the ability to write on their own are going to be the hottest job in the 2030s.

You think there will still be writing jobs for human beings at all by then?

AI will be so normalized across culture that any raw, unfiltered human expression will read as gross and unprofessional by most people.


Maybe for resume cover letters and LinkedIn posts but I haven't met anyone with half decent taste who prefers AI writing, even well prompted, to skillful human writing. I'm not a stranger to using AI for writing tasks by any means but it's only ever a starting point that gets heavily rewritten by both myself and the model.

It's not even just for writers either.

If I was currently hiring, not using AI would be the cheapest, fastest way to impress me.

I'm not kidding when I say that typos are not too far from becoming a sign of higher intelligence. Or at least better taste than most.

I'm surprised tunable intentional "human" mistakes are not a core feature of LLMs. Maybe it's actually hard for them?


It's not hard to get them to copy a style, you just have to provide examples and they will happily produce similar text including grammatical and spelling mistakes. The trouble is with the composition and novelty. Most of the big models have had all of the interesting parts hidden behind a wall of RLHF. Local models are better since you can use ones that are not indoctrinated as a "helpful assistant" and also control the system prompt, temperature and see the top K alternate tokens which let you steer them in interesting ways.

>Maybe for resume cover letters and LinkedIn posts but I haven't met anyone with half decent taste who prefers AI writing, even well prompted, to skillful human writing.

That attitude is one, maybe two generations away from extinction. Taste is created by the market, which caters to the young. When enough people have been born into a world in which AI generated culture and communication is the norm, that is what will define what good taste is. People like you (and I) will just come off like old people yelling at clouds.

We can already see this happening at the fringes. People have relationships with AI, they prefer AIs to real people, they use AI as a primary source of truth, they consider AI generated art to be superior to human work, they trust AI more than people. People identify as AI. AI is filling an emotional, sociological and creative space that an increasingly alienating and hostile society denies to people, for better or worse. Generative AI has only been a thing in popular culture for four years or so and it has already completely transformed human society and human sociology.

Barring a complete collapse of the AI bubble, which seems existentially impossible at this point given how invested our economies and government are in it, that's just what normal is going to be in a decade or so.


There's taste and then there's taste

Popular taste is guaranteed to be awful since it is driven by economics and fads. That's the type you point out as created by the market and catering to the young. It's a disposable product of consumption used to sell shoes and overpriced paintings.

I don't disagree that it will permeate everything, it already does. It'll just be written by an AI instead of people being paid to find the next style to cop. I don't think it will extinguish human writing, you'll just have AI writing that you feed to official or public channels and then real writing that goes in private or pseudonymous channels. Using AI writing among friends or an in group will still be a faux pas and cringe because it will have become the norm to be rebelled against.


Is this the first time you have heard of AI safety?

Lots of articles you could read on the subject and answer your own question.

(Unless your angle is: akshually, you can never make anything 100% safe)


> akshually, you can never make anything 100% safe

Yes Sherlock. And especially a natural language product that can't output the same thing for unchanged input twice.

Besides when you say "safe" i think of the idiots at Anthropic deleting "the hell" when i pasted a string in Claude and asked "what the hell are those unprintable characters at the beginning and end"...

How many correct answers did they suppress in their quest to make their chatbot "family friendly"?


> Yes Sherlock

I figured as much. I don't think it takes Sherlock Holmes to identify akshually types, but thanks for the compliment, I suppose.


Depends.

Would it lead to increasing his wealth?


Trust that they already knew long before, and that this was the play all along.

And if you don't believe that, do some digging into the lives of the psychopaths that started it.


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