• @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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    41 month ago

    Why is that a criticism? This is how it works for humans too: we study, we learn the stuff, and then try to recall it during tests. We’ve been trained on the data too, for neither a human nor an ai would be able to do well on the test without learning it first.

    This is part of what makes ai so “scary” that it can basically know so much.

      • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        I absolutely agree. However, if you think the LLMs are just fancy LUTs, then I strongly disagree. Unless, of course, we are also just fancy LUTs.

        • @captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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          121 month ago

          You ever meet an ai researcher with a background in biology? I’ve discussed this stuff with one. She disagrees with Turing about machines thinking including when ai is in the picture. They process information very differently from how biology does

          • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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            -71 month ago

            This is a vague non answer, although I agree it’s done very differently because our process is biological and ai is not.

            But as I asked elsewhere, what’s the effective difference?

      • @phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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        -61 month ago

        Well… I do agree with you but human brains are basically big prediction engines that use lookup tables, experience, to navigate around life. Obviously a super simplification, and LLMs are nowhere near humans, but it is quite a step in the direction.

        • @Soyweiser@awful.systems
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          151 month ago

          Well, I don’t think humans are turing computable, so I disagree with you there. Which should have been clear from my initial post.

          Fun fact, what you just said about how humans are just computers is also part of dianetics. Amazing how it happened in 2 different cults.

        • flere-imsaho
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          131 month ago

          oh my, you’re such a confluence of bad takes (racist, transphobic, creepy and ignorant of the technical and biological topics you’re pontificating about.)

        • @ebu@awful.systems
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          1 month ago

          ░S░T░O░C░H░A░S░T░I░C░P░A░R░R░O░T░I░N░B░I░O░

      • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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        -71 month ago

        I guess it comes down to a philosophical question as to what “know” actually means.

        But from my perspective is that it certainly knows some things. It knows how to determine what I’m asking, and it clearly knows how to formulate a response by stitching together information. Is it perfect? No. But neither are humans, we mistakenly believe we know things all the time, and miscommunications are quite common.

        But this is why I asked the follow up question…what’s the effective difference? Don’t get me wrong, they clearly have a lot of flaws right now. But my 8 year old had a lot of flaws too, and I assume both will get better with age.

        • @froztbyte@awful.systems
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          201 month ago

          nearly every word of your post demonstrates a comprehensively thorough lack of understanding of how this shit works

          it also demonstrates why you’re lost about the “effective difference”

          I don’t mean this aggressively, but you really don’t have any concrete idea of wtf you’re talking about, and it shows

        • @YouKnowWhoTheFuckIAM@awful.systems
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          181 month ago

          Yeah, it’s a philosophical question, which means you need a philosophical answer. Spitballing won’t help you figure shit out a priori because it turns out that learning how to think a priori effectively takes years of hard graft and is called “studying philosophy”. You should be asking people like me what “know” means in this context and what distinguishes memory in human beings from “memory” in an LLM (a great deal, as it happens!)

        • flere-imsaho
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          181 month ago

          i guess it comes down to a philosophical question

          no, it doesn’t, and it’s not a philosophical question (and neither is this a question of philosophy).

          the software simply has no cognitive capabilities.

          • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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            -31 month ago

            I’m not sure I agree, but then it goes to my second question:

            What’s the effective difference?

            • flere-imsaho
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              161 month ago

              (…) perception, attention, thought, imagination, intelligence, comprehension, the formation of knowledge, memory and working memory, judgment and evaluation, reasoning and computation, problem-solving and decision-making (…)

            • @braxy29@lemmy.world
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              -71 month ago

              don’t know why you got downvoted, an LLM is essentially a chinese room, and whether such a room “knows” is still the question.

          • @Soyweiser@awful.systems
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            121 month ago

            The dehumanization that happens just because people think LLMs are impressive (they are, just not that impressive) is insane.

            • @ebu@awful.systems
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              91 month ago

              need to be able to think LLM’s are impressive, probably

              surely tech will save us all, right?

    • @exanime
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      111 month ago

      Because a machine that “forgets” stuff it reads seems rather useless… considering it was a multiple choice style exam and, as a machine, Chat GPT had the book entirely memorized, it should have scored perfect almost all the time.

      • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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        01 month ago

        Chat GPT had the book entirely memorized

        I feel like this exposes a fundamental misunderstanding of how LLMs are trained.

        • @TachyonTele@lemm.ee
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          121 month ago

          They’re auto complete machines. All they fundamentally do is match words together. If it was trained on the answers and still couldn’t reproduce the correct word matches, it failed.

        • @YIj54yALOJxEsY20eU@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          Don’t worry friend, you are correct.

          Edit: Lets see some intelligent responses rather than downvotes. Bunch off teens majoring in “AI”.