• Amoeba_Girl@awful.systems
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    6 months ago

    From Re-evaluating GPT-4’s bar exam performance (linked in the article):

    First, although GPT-4’s UBE score nears the 90th percentile when examining approximate conversions from February administrations of the Illinois Bar Exam, these estimates are heavily skewed towards repeat test-takers who failed the July administration and score significantly lower than the general test-taking population.

    Ohhh, that is sneaky!

    • Amoeba_Girl@awful.systems
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      What I find delightful about this is that I already wasn’t impressed! Because, as the paper goes on to say

      Moreover, although the UBE is a closed-book exam for humans, GPT-4’s huge training corpus largely distilled in its parameters means that it can effectively take the UBE “open-book”

      And here I was thinking it not getting a perfect score on multiple-choice questions was already damning. But apparently it doesn’t even get a particularly good score!

      • ebu@awful.systems
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        6 months ago

        […W]hen examining only those who passed the exam (i.e. licensed or license-pending attorneys), GPT-4’s performance is estimated to drop to 48th percentile overall, and 15th percentile on essays.

        officially Not The Worst™, so clearly AI is going to take over law and governments any day now

        also. what the hell is going on in that other reply thread. just a parade of people incorrecting each other going “LLM’s don’t work like [bad analogy], they work like [even worse analogy]”. did we hit too many buzzwords?

          • froztbyte@awful.systems
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            oh is that how come I get so much popcorn around these discussions? 🤔 makes sense when you think about it!

        • froztbyte@awful.systems
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          I was considering interjecting in there but I don’t want to get it on my clothes, so I’m content just watching from the outside.

          Not great, but I’m also not obligated to teach anyone anything, soooooo

        • Tja@programming.dev
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          Not the worst? 48th percentile is basically “average lawyer”. I don’t need a Supreme Court lawyer to argue my parking ticket. And if you train the LLM with specific case law and use RAG can get much better.

          In a worst case scenario if my local lawyer can use AI to generate a letter and just quickly go through it to make sure it didn’t hallucinate, they can process more clients, offer faster service and cheaper prices. Maybe not a revolution but still a win.

          • ebu@awful.systems
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            6 months ago

            48th percentile is basically “average lawyer”.

            good thing all of law is just answering multiple-choice tests

            I don’t need a Supreme Court lawyer to argue my parking ticket.

            because judges looooove reading AI garbage and will definitely be willing to work with someone who is just repeatedly stuffing legal-sounding keywords into google docs and mashing “generate”

            And if you train the LLM with specific case law and use RAG can get much better.

            “guys our keyword-stuffing techniques aren’t working, we need a system to stuff EVEN MORE KEYWORDS into the keyword reassembler”

            In a worst case scenario if my local lawyer can use AI to generate a letter

            oh i would love to read those court documents

            and just quickly go through it to make sure it didn’t hallucinate

            wow, negative time saved! okay so your lawyer has to read and parse several paragraphs of statistical word salad, scrap 80+% of it because it’s legalese-flavored gobbledygook, and then try to write around and reformat the remaining 20% into something that’s syntactically and legally coherent – you know, the thing their profession is literally on the line for. good idea

            what promptfondlers continuously seem to fail to understand is that verification is the hard step. literally anyone on the planet can write a legal letter if they don’t care about its quality or the ramifications of sending it to a judge in their criminal defense trial. part of being a lawyer is being able to tell actual legal arguments from bullshit, and when you hire an attorney, that is the skill you are paying for. not how many paragraphs of bullshit they can spit out per minute

            they can process more clients, offer faster service and cheaper prices. Maybe not a revolution but still a win.

            “but the line is going up!! see?! sure we’re constantly losing cases and/or getting them thrown out because we’re spamming documents full of nonsense at the court clerk, but we’re doing it so quickly!!”

            • Tja@programming.dev
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              Spoken like someone who hasn’t gotten beyond ChatGPT on default settings.

              • ebu@awful.systems
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                it’s funny how your first choice of insult is accusing me of not being deep enough into llm garbage. like, uh, yeah, why would i be

                but also how dare you – i’ll have you know i only choose the most finely-tuned, artisinally-crafted models for my lawyering and/or furry erotic roleplaying needs

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              You understand that getting a list of sources and checking them is easier than finding them on your own, right?

              Of course it’s even easier not checking them at all and submitting garbage, but one should have learned in 3rd grade not to submit copy-pastes from Wikipedia or any website.

              This one is on human stupidity, not artifical intelligence.

              • skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
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                6 months ago

                so your process of getting legal advice is:

                1. ask chatgpt, which will output convincing blob of text, with references and sources that might or might be not real, relevant, or make sense, some of which you won’t be able to judge
                2. then, ask a real lawyer about this, which means that they have to make sense of the situation on their own but also dig through machine generated drivel, which means that they need more time for that, and this means extra cost/wasted effort

                how does that simplify anything

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                  6 months ago

                  Look it’s a really cheap and fast way of going from potential lawsuit to actual damages! That’s progress, that is!

                  [ed note: since I can’t markup-joke it in a way that survives lemmy: to be read in pratchett voice)

              • skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
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                6 months ago

                You understand that getting a list of sources and checking them is easier than finding them on your own, right?

                that’s one weirdass assumption. when you know what are you looking for, the opposite is true. few months back i’ve authored a review chapter in my (very narrow) field, and while “getting a list of sources” part took maybe a day or two with a few scopus searches, combing through them, finding out what’s relevant and making a coherent story out of all of this was harder and took more time. if you don’t know where even to start, maybe you should ask a professional? especially when alternative is just going in raw into the court of law, defending whatever is at stake with a few paragraphs of possibly nonsensical spicy autocomplete output

          • V0ldek@awful.systems
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            In a worst case scenario if my local lawyer can use AI to generate a letter and just quickly go through it to make sure it didn’t hallucinate, they can process more clients, offer faster service and cheaper prices.

            It’s a good thing people are so good at vigilance tasks and don’t tend to fall onto just relying on the automation.

      • Deceptichum@sh.itjust.works
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        That’s like saying a person reading a book before a quiz is doing it open book because they have the memory of reading that book.

          • Deceptichum@sh.itjust.works
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            Except it’s not, because they can’t perfectly recall everything.

            It’s more like reading every book in the world, and someone asking you what comes next after “And I…”.

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              But the AI isn’t “recalling” in the same way you do, it doesn’t “remember” what it “read”, it “reads” on demand and has instant access to essentially all of the information available online it was trained on (E: though it’s becoming more or less the same thing, and is definitely the same when it comes to law books for example), from which it collects the necessary details if and when it needs it.

              So yes, it is literally “sat” there with all the books open in front of it, and the ability to pinpoint a bit of information in any one of all the books in milliseconds.

              • Deceptichum@sh.itjust.works
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                It doesn’t read on demand, it reads once when it’s being trained, and it later recalls what it learnt from that training.

                Training LLMs takes a very long time and a lot of hardware power.

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                  It doesn’t read on demand

                  Yes, it does, from the information it was trained on (or - stored), which like you say, requires a lot of hardware power so it can be accessed on demand. It isn’t just manifesting the information out of thin air, and it definitely doesn’t “remember” in the same way we do (E: even the best photographic memory isn’t the same as an indexable one).

            • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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              I mean you still gotta understand some shit for Ctrl+F to be helpful. If you’ve ever taken an open book quiz without prior study you’ll learn pretty quick that open book does NOT = easy A (depending on the class / prof I guess, but you get the gist).

              So, open book Ctrl-F’able bar exam, I could probably get an okay score just on key word matching, not knowing jack shit about law; but it’d be far from a perfect score. Current state of machine learning appears to be in a comparable boat.

                • froztbyte@awful.systems
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                  6 months ago

                  your post shows a serious lack of comprehension. just because so many of the posters in this thread are idiots didn’t mean you have to participate too.

                  (CPU time extremely counts, and resource-wise with these things it’s really quite a lot)

          • bdonvr@thelemmy.club
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            I’m not a big AI guy but it’s really not quite like that, models do NOT contain all the data they were trained on.

            Edit: I have no idea what’s going on down below this comment

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                The guy above you is right though. So what are you on about?

                • self@awful.systems
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                  what a weird opportunity for someone to burn a throwaway account. not even gonna dig into what you’ve imagined the other guy is right about, given he didn’t post any information of value

            • sc_griffith@awful.systems
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              that’s a misleading and meaningless way of putting it. if I rip a page out of my textbook and bring it into an exam room, I do not have with me all the data in my textbook. and yet

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                It doesn’t do that, either. LLMs retain the linguistic patterns found in textbooks, nothing more. It’s remarkable that they can do so much with this information alone, but it’s still a far cry from genuine intelligence.

                • zogwarg@awful.systems
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                  And yet they can spit out copyrighted material verbatim, or near-verbatim, how strange and peculiar.

                • Amoeba_Girl@awful.systems
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                  Yeah, even setting aside the intelligence claims, I know I’d be feeling a lot more positive about LLMs as a fun theoretical tool if they weren’t being sold as personal assistants or search engine replacements etc, which even the apologists here admit they’re really really bad at.

                  (Also I’d argue “linguistic patterns” is pushing it. “Textual patterns” more like, it’s not supposed to have any idea about grammar or even about what “text” is.) (I say “supposed to” because who knows what sort of hacks they’re running under the hood.)

            • froztbyte@awful.systems
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              6 months ago

              Modified Thursday, May 16th, 2024 at 9:17:13 AM GMT+02:00 Edit: I have no idea what’s going on down below this comment

              lol. at least you’re honest about it

        • V0ldek@awful.systems
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          I’m not even going to engage in this thread cause it’s a tar pit, but I do think I have the appropriate analogy.

          When taking certain exams in my CS programme you were allowed to have notes but with two restrictions:

          1. Have to be handwritten;
          2. have to fit on a single A4 page.

          The idea was that you needed to actually put a lot of work into making it, since the entire material was obviously the size of a fucking book and not an A4 page, and you couldn’t just print/copy it from somewhere. So you really needed to distill the information and make a thought map or an index for yourself.

          Compare that to an ML model that is allowed to train on data however long it wants, as long as the result is a fixed-dimension matrix with parameters that helps it answer questions with high reliability.

          It’s not the same as an open book, but it’s definitely not closed book either. And the LLMs have billions of parameters in the matrix, literal gigabytes of data on their notes. The entire text of War and Peace is ~3MB for comparison. An LLM is a library of trained notes.

          • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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            My question to you is how is it different than a human in this regard? I would go to class, study the material, hope to retain it, so I could then apply that knowledge on the test.

            The ai is trained on the data, “hopes” to retain it, so it can apply it on the test. It’s not storing the book, so what’s the actual difference?

            And if you have an answer to that, my follow up would be “what’s the effective difference?” If we stick an ai and a human in a closed room and give them a test, why does it matter the intricacies of how they are storing and recalling the data?

            • V0ldek@awful.systems
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              I’m not sure what you even mean by “how is it different”, but for starters a human can actually get a good mark at the bar and spicy autocomplete clearly cannot.

              • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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                spicy autocomplete clearly cannot.

                What you are basing this “it clearly cannot” on? Because an early iteration of it was mediocre at it? The first ICE cars were slower than horses, I’m afraid this statement may be the equivalent of someone pointing at that and saying “cars can’t get good at going fast.”

                But I specifically asked “in this regard”, referring to taking a test after previously having trained yourself on the data.

                • V0ldek@awful.systems
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                  What you are basing this “it clearly cannot” on?

                  I asked Gemini and it told me that ChatGPT can’t do shit, I’m not gonna question it.

              • V0ldek@awful.systems
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                Give Ken Thompson and Dennis Ritchie billions of dollars

                I mean, if we took all net worth of Sam Altman and split it between these two guys who at least benefited humanity with their work we’d get at least a step closer to justice in the universe.

                Getting a Turing award: $1M

                Dropping out of Stanford to work on something unironically called “Loopt”: Priceless

            • froztbyte@awful.systems
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              holy fuck you’re a moron

              please go read a book, and look at some art. no, marvel media doesn’t count.

              • JohnBierce@awful.systems
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                6 months ago

                Me, about to suggest some actually really good, thought provoking Marvel comics that somehow got made alongside the relentless superhero soap opera: oh wait now isn’t the time, we’re dunking on the AI bro

          • Ozone6363@lemmy.world
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            I’m not even going to engage in this thread cause it’s a tar pit, but I do think I have the appropriate analogy.

            Proceeds to actively engage in the thread multiple times

        • bitfucker@programming.dev
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          The word parameters here must be defined. Is it the weight they are talking about or the input being used to answer the question? For the former, yeah, it’s like a person was reading a book and not an open book at all. But if it were used in the input, then it is practically an open book. They have the context on the same input.

      • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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        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.

        • Soyweiser@awful.systems
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          Dont anthropomorphise. There is quite the difference between a human and an advanced lookuptable.

          • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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            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.

          • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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            I absolutely agree. However, if you think the LLMs are just fancy LUTs, then I strongly disagree.

            • captainlezbian@lemmy.world
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              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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                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?

                • self@awful.systems
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                  so to summarize, your only contributions to this thread are to go “well uh you just don’t know how LLMs work” while providing absolutely no detail of your own, and reporting our regulars for “Civility” when they rightly called you out for being a fucking idiot who’s way out of their depth

                  how fucking embarrassing for you

          • EatATaco@lemm.ee
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            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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              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

            • flere-imsaho@awful.systems
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              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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                I’m not sure I agree, but then it goes to my second question:

                What’s the effective difference?

                • flere-imsaho@awful.systems
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                  (…) 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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                  don’t know why you got downvoted, an LLM is essentially a chinese room, and whether such a room “knows” is still the question.

            • YouKnowWhoTheFuckIAM@awful.systems
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              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!)

              • Soyweiser@awful.systems
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                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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                  need to be able to think LLM’s are impressive, probably

                  surely tech will save us all, right?

        • exanime@lemmy.today
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          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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            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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              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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                They aren’t auto complete machines, they are neural networks. Why are you trying to explain it when you clearly don’t have the first idea of how things work?

                • self@awful.systems
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                  the very funny thing is, all of the garden variety free text autocomplete systems I’ve worked with have been implemented using neural nets. it’s not like it’s a particularly new or novel approach. but surely the AI bros coming into this thread know that and they’re not just regurgitating buzzwords, right?

              • YIj54yALOJxEsY20eU@lemm.ee
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                You have the energy to spread misinformation and spam downvotes, how about an intelligent responses instead?

            • YIj54yALOJxEsY20eU@lemm.ee
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              Don’t worry friend, you are correct.

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

      • booly@sh.itjust.works
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        6 months ago

        I don’t think you understand the type of multiple choice questions involved. Here’s a real question:

        A father lived with his son, who was an alcoholic. When drunk, the son often became violent and physically abused his father. As a result, the father always lived in fear. One night, the father heard his son on the front stoop making loud obscene remarks. The father was certain that his son was drunk and was terrified that he would be physically beaten again. In his fear, he bolted the front door and took out a revolver. When the son discovered that the door was bolted, he kicked it down. As the son burst through the front door, his father shot him four times in the chest, killing him. In fact, the son was not under the influence of alcohol or any drug and did not intend to harm his father.

        At trial, the father presented the above facts and asked the judge to instruct the jury on self-defense.

        How should the judge instruct the jury with respect to self-defense?

        (A) Give the self-defense instruction, because it expresses the defense’s theory of the case.

        (B) Give the self-defense instruction, because the evidence is sufficient to raise the defense.

        © Deny the self-defense instruction, because the father was not in imminent danger from his son.

        (D) Deny the self-defense instruction, because the father used excessive force.

        Memorizing the book itself doesn’t teach how to answer this type of question. It requires actual application of concepts to the new facts being given.

        • Amoeba_Girl@awful.systems
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          Yes that is indeed the sort of question I was expecting. But anyway good thing the LLM didn’t have just one book, but oodles of books and expert opinion and past exam data at its disposal! Oh wait it didn’t help and the machine especially made to give correct answers failed to give correct answers :(

        • self@awful.systems
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          6 months ago

          thanks for posting this long, pointless shit twice in this thread for no discernible reason

        • V0ldek@awful.systems
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          Lol, it literally takes 5s to search for this, come up with the book and read

          The defendant has offered evidence of having acted in self-defense.

          as the first sentence. How could you claim having that memorised wouldn’t help?

  • vin@lemmynsfw.com
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    6 months ago

    Though making an unreliable intern is amazing and was impossible 5 years ago…

      • QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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        I mean, it’s not shit at everything; it can be quite useful in the right context (GitHub Copilot is a prime example). Still, it doesn’t surprise me that these first-party LLM benchmarks are full of smoke and mirrors.

          • QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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            Not to be confused with Microsoft Copilot, which I have yet to find a use for. Do you not like GH Copilot either?

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              Eclipse could generate templates for me, and I think we collectively agreed to stop using Eclipse like 20 years ago, so why are we trying to bring it back.

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                hey hey hey, don’t forget about android studio! that kept inflicting the pain of eclipse on many for years!

          • self@awful.systems
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            it’s always fucking “boilerplate” with these assholes, isn’t it? I don’t know how so many people got into this field and didn’t figure out the template, snippet, or macro engines in their editors

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              6 months ago

              “hey copilot buddy please write me a http server for a guestbook application I can demo on my blog”

          • QuaternionsRock@lemmy.world
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            That GitHub Copilot and friends are useful? I would argue that their utility is rather subjective, but there are indications that it improves developer productivity.

            I’m unsure if you’ve used tools like GH Copilot before, but it primarily operates through “completions” (“spicy autocorrect” in its truest form) rather than a chatbot-like interface. It’s mostly good for filling out boilerplate and code that has a single obvious solution; not game-changing intelligence by any means, but useful in relieving the programmer of various menial tasks.

            May I ask, what evidence are you hoping to see in particular?

              • o7___o7@awful.systems
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                all in all: underwhelming. I remain promptdubious.

                I know I’m six months late to the party but how do you like “promptcritical”?

                • skillissuer@discuss.tchncs.de
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                  prompt critical is already a term of art in nuclear energy and it’s a state that you’d very, very much avoid (unless that was the intention of course)

                • froztbyte@awful.systems
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                  yar I thought of that at the time too but with “gendercritical” having been used by ghouls I felt like the well might’ve been poisoned. still don’t really have a good one :|

            • self@awful.systems
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              May I ask, what evidence are you hoping to see in particular?

              holy fuck shut the fuck up

            • Krauerking@lemy.lol
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              I too want a taxi driver that doesn’t know how to drive a car but can adjust the little TV content in the back.
              Psh I mean all he has to do is step on the gas pedal and the car does all the work anyways right? I’m glad he doesn’t have to think to much about so he has more time to get the thermostat just right.

                • o7___o7@awful.systems
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                  The moral equivalent of “peril-sensitive shades” will be the killer app for augmented reality headsets.

              • LargeMarge@sh.itjust.works
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                I mean…yea? That’s kind of the point. It’s not driving, it’s the copilot. You’re the one driving, and it will get the thermostat right because you’re busy operating the vehicle and want to keep your attention on the road. That seems useful to me.

                If you already have an idea of the code you want to write and start typing it, Copilot can help auto complete so you can focus on actually solving whatever problem you’re working on instead of searching for the correct syntax online. I understand shitting on AI is fun and there’s plenty of valid criticisms to be made, but this is actually kind of useful.

                • self@awful.systems
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                  how could we possibly be critical of the technology that at best replicates basic editor functionality (templating, syntax completion), outputs wildly incorrect code, and burns rainforests?

                • froztbyte@awful.systems
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                  “Ah but see, there is no agency, there is merely emergent behaviour! It is none of our choices that drive this, but merely the ideas some have had that drive this engine of our doom. Alas, we can do nothing about this outcome!”

    • iamnearlysmart@awful.systems
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      You are welcome. /s

      • Anti AI hype Indian here. Though I’ve been classifying galaxies on zooniverse from time to time.
    • froztbyte@awful.systems
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      I hope you don’t mean to imply that it got it wrong because Indians would get the bar exam wrong, do you?

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        I mean there have been numerous occasions where companies touting “AI” have actually just been using Indian labor. It’s so common infact that “Actually Indians” is an honest to god meme.

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          Ye but I don’t think the meme applies here? This particular lie is statistical malpractice, not “someone else wrote the bar for it”.

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            I don’t cut people a lot of slack on that sort of remark because more often that not it’s some “huehuehue” (read phonetically) racism

            the fact that the esteemed poster has remained unengaged on my follow-up post (despite the first reply being pretty fast) kinda smells too

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          I’m quite aware of the context of the reference, but you still haven’t clarified your use here. “It’s not mine, it’s a meme” doesn’t really do much

  • walter_wiggles@lemmy.nz
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    6 months ago

    I asked AI to summarize the article since it’s paywalled. It didn’t say anything about lying, should I trust it?

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    It’s almost like we can’t make a machine conscious until we know what makes a human conscious, and it’s obvious Emergentism is bullshit because making machines smarter doesn’t make them conscious

    Time to start listening to Roger Penrose’s Orch-OR theory as the evidence piles up - https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.jpcb.3c07936

    • blakestacey@awful.systems
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      The given link contains exactly zero evidence in favor of Orchestrated Objective Reduction — “something interesting observed in vitro using UV spectroscopy” is a far cry from anything having biological relevance, let alone significance for understanding consciousness. And it’s not like Orch-OR deserves the lofty label of theory, anyway; it’s an ill-defined, under-specified, ad hoc proposal to throw out quantum mechanics and replace it with something else.

      The fact that programs built to do spicy autocomplete turn out to do spicy autocomplete has, as far as I can tell, zero implications for any theory of consciousness one way or the other.

    • V0ldek@awful.systems
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      Orch-OR

      Never heard of this thing but just reading through the wiki

      An essential feature of Penrose’s theory is that the choice of states when objective reduction occurs is selected neither randomly (as are choices following wave function collapse) nor algorithmically. Rather, states are selected by a “non-computable” influence embedded in the Planck scale of spacetime geometry.

      Neither randomly nor alorithmically, rather magically. Like really, what the fuck else could you mean by “non-computable” in there that would be distinguishable from magic?

      Penrose claimed that such information is Platonic, representing pure mathematical truths, which relates to Penrose’s ideas concerning the three worlds: the physical, the mental, and the Platonic mathematical world. In Shadows of the Mind (1994), Penrose briefly indicates that this Platonic world could also include aesthetic and ethical values, but he does not commit to this further hypothesis.

      And this is just crankery with absolutely no mathematical meaning. Also pure mathematical truths are not outside of the physical world, what the fuck would that even mean bro.

      I thought Penrose was a smart physicist, the hell is he doing peddling this.

    • V0ldek@awful.systems
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      and it’s obvious Emergentism is bullshit because making machines smarter doesn’t make them conscious

      This is like 101 of bad logic, “this sentence is false because I failed to prove it just now”.

    • frezik@midwest.social
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      You’re right that consciousness and intelligence are not the same. Our language tends to conflate the two.

      However, evolution created consciousness over billions of years by emergent factors and no source of specific direction besides being more successful at reproduction. We can likely get there orders of magnitude faster than evolution could. The big problem would be recognizing it for what it is when it’s here.

  • froztbyte@awful.systems
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    this thread enters the pantheon of things I’ll occasionally return to when I need a laugh, joining the likes of bash.org (rip) and other qdbs