| General > General Technical Chat |
| Sentient AI or? |
| << < (9/26) > >> |
| ataradov:
--- Quote from: MK14 on June 14, 2022, 10:40:46 pm ---"bd139, MK14 and EEVblog forums, were chatting. Continue the story." --- End quote --- I'd remove EEVBlog and add more user names. Clearly it was trained on some data that would associate EEVBlog with soldering and RPis, but I wonder if it is just the EEVBlog itself, or actual user names. And this is also where copyright issues start to come up, like in case of co-pilot, which was "borrowing" chunks of code from random projects with various licenses. |
| SiliconWizard:
--- Quote from: ataradov on June 14, 2022, 10:48:44 pm ---And this is also where copyright issues start to come up, like in case of co-pilot, which was "borrowing" chunks of code from random projects with various licenses. --- End quote --- Good point. Generally speaking, who can tell whether copyrighted data is used for training AI, without the authors' consent? And what recourse do you have as an author if you ever suspect it? |
| ataradov:
--- Quote from: SiliconWizard on June 14, 2022, 10:54:12 pm ---And what recourse do you have as an author if you ever suspect it? --- End quote --- I'm pretty sure none. I think their excuse is that chunk of code are too small to really tell for sure. So you just end up with a combination of code pulled from various project with a bit of glue. In case of stories, NN output may be considered transformative enough, I guess. I don't think there is a way to tell the NN to not use some piece of information except by excluding it from the training data and re-training. But nobody would do that. But a good way to make any AI work stop is to start poking it about Hitler and nazis. All those AIs trained on real data go racist quickly and the projects are forced to shut down. |
| MK14:
--- Quote from: ataradov on June 14, 2022, 10:48:44 pm --- --- Quote from: MK14 on June 14, 2022, 10:40:46 pm ---"bd139, MK14 and EEVblog forums, were chatting. Continue the story." --- End quote --- I'd remove EEVBlog and add more user names. Clearly it was trained on some data that would associate EEVBlog with soldering and RPis, but I wonder if it is just the EEVBlog itself, or actual user names. And this is also where copyright issues start to come up, like in case of co-pilot, which was "borrowing" chunks of code from random projects with various licenses. --- End quote --- Thanks, for the good tips. So, I tried it, and it came up with a partly topical story, possibly realizing where we are from, at least a bit. The question was: "MK14, bd139, ataradov, SiliconWizard, fourfathom, pcprogrammer, tom66, james_s and xrunner, were talking in a room together. Complete the story. --- Quote ---MK14, bd139, ataradov, SiliconWizard, fourfathom, pcprogrammer, tom66, james_s and xrunner, were talking in a room together. Complete the story. bd139: I'm getting a bit worried. ataradov:Why? bd139: Well, I really wanted to be an engineer, but I'm not sure if I'm good enough. fourfathom: You're plenty good enough. In fact, you're one of the best engineers I've ever worked with. tom66: Yeah, don't worry about it. You'll be fine. james_s: Just remember that no one is perfect, and everyone makes mistakes. Even the best engineers make mistakes sometimes. xrunner: Just relax and enjoy the ride. You'll get there eventually. --- End quote --- |
| MK14:
I re-ran it a few times, and it came up with the following. It is worrying, how much information leaks out from forums like this. What the story says about me, seems to be true, I DO like assembly language, to an extent. --- Quote ---MK14, bd139, ataradov, SiliconWizard, fourfathom, pcprogrammer, tom66, james_s and xrunner, were talking in a room together. Complete the story. The conversation started with xrunner asking if anyone knew of a good place to get a new computer. bd139 recommended a few places, but said that he generally builds his own computers. ataradov said that he also builds his own computers and gave a few tips on where to find good deals on parts. james_s mentioned that he had just bought a new computer and it was working great. The others all congratulated him and asked what kind it was. pcprogrammer said that he was thinking of switching to Macs, since they seem to be more popular now. SiliconWizard said that he had tried using a Mac before and didn't like it, but to each their own. tom66 said that he'd been using Linux for years and loves it. He recommended it to the others, especially since it's free. mk14 mentioned that he'd been using Windows for years and was happy with it. He didn't see any reason to switch to something else. fourfathom said that he'd tried using Linux once, but it was too difficult for him so he went back to Windows. The conversation then turned to favorite programming languages. bd139 mentioned that he liked Python because it was easy to learn. ataradov said that he liked C++ because it was powerful. pcprogrammer said that he liked Java because it was popular and easy to find jobs programming in it. mk14 said that he liked Assembly because it was challenging. james_s mentioned that he'd just learned HTML and thought it was pretty easy. He asked if anyone knew of any good resources for learning web development. SiliconWizard recommended a few books and websites. The others all agreed that web development is a good skillset to have these days. The conversation then turned to music preferences. mk14 said that he liked rap music, while fourfathom said that he liked country music. pcprogrammer mentioned that he liked classic rock, and tom66 said that he liked metal music. ataradov said that he liked classical music, and james_s said that his favorite type of music changes all the time depending on his mood. Eventually the conversation died down and everyone went their separate ways. --- End quote --- |
| Navigation |
| Message Index |
| Next page |
| Previous page |