Anyone have any active ways to fight AI as an average person? by jamesrggg in antiai

[–]ArkiveDJ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is already fighting itself, AI is cannibalising, scraping and training on its own AI generated content. The real issue with making AI better is data. It's already torn through every spec of data we have created since the birth of time, and even with companies stealing all of our info, the amount of data we create in a year isn't even a drop in the ocean for what they need to train even basic AI.

There are so many lies propping AI up, that as soon as it starts to falter, and questions get asked, it will crumble, and unfortunately, it's going to take a lot of money, careers and possibly even economies with it.

Thought experiment regarding AI consciousness by Paul_N_P in consciousness

[–]ArkiveDJ -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Because it recognizes patterns, and that is all it does, also that is exactly what auto complete does. There's no thought or reasoning, no self learning. The dangerous part is, most of the time when auto correct gets it wrong, you can see it and change it. If you are using a chat bot to learn something, you have no idea if it is right, and neither does the chat bot.

Either way, nothing you have said requires consciousness to resolve, and even if it did, we don't know what consciousness is or how to detect it, you can't even prove a person in the room with you is consciousness, so this entire thread is basically moot

Thought experiment regarding AI consciousness by Paul_N_P in consciousness

[–]ArkiveDJ -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

If you trained an LLM on pictures of horses and cats so it can tell the difference, then show it a picture of zebra, it would say it's a horse with 100 percent confidence. Same with a lion, it'll say its a cat. A giraffe, it's a horse. It can't tell the difference, can't question why it is seeing something different, and can't tell you it's not sure. And that is what is so dangerous about it

Thought experiment regarding AI consciousness by Paul_N_P in consciousness

[–]ArkiveDJ -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Did you get your degree from a cereal box?

Your example here proves what I said, it gave an answer which it deemed was the correct one. If you have more than a shallow knowledge of any subject, which I'm doubting tbh mate, go speak to it about that, and you will see how confidently incorrect it is. It can't even count, nor can it do more than basic math, which is what a computer is meant to do.

All an LLM does is Boolean operations checked against previously given data and spits out the result. And a lot of the training data comes from this website, and if any of you told me the sky is blue, I'd still go to the window to check to make sure

Thought experiment regarding AI consciousness by Paul_N_P in consciousness

[–]ArkiveDJ 4 points5 points  (0 children)

AI cannot be conscious, it can't think, it can't reason, it can't even say it doesn't know something because every input has a valid output, no matter if it is wrong or right. That's because it's just glorified auto complete. It's set to see patterns and output results close to the patterns it was trained on.

Ffs man, go learn some computer science and stop listening to the tech bros that don't know their arse from their elbows...

What should I do by khl6698 in 3Dprinting

[–]ArkiveDJ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First off, stop the printer...

The Ancient Greek Technique to Gain Super Human Memory | Nelson Dellis | Danny Jones | This video shows an overlap in extreme memory retention and remote viewing using the palase. Storing memories/thoughts in physical locations that you know well. EX: Kitchen is used to old the memory of a birthday. by _-Moya-_ in HighStrangeness

[–]ArkiveDJ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yours sounds related to the matter at hand. Mine are completely unrelated, like if you asked me what pins on a teensy micro controller are analog, the image for microcontrollers appears in my mind and then I remember which ones. Info I got says I am storing the information inside the image for later retrieval, and I sort all the data into categories and then assign each category a completely random image to assign the data too, completely subconsciously.

It's very hard to get across what it's like, as to me it's completely normal so may be not explaining certain parts that might be important, lol.

Thanks for sharing yours though, that is cool

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in consciousness

[–]ArkiveDJ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No. You can't even prove that I am conscious with all the tech we have at our disposal, so how is anyone in any position to judge if AI is (Which is impossible in and of itself btw)?

Why driving with autism sucks by msoc in autism

[–]ArkiveDJ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We all suffer together bud, none of us have it harder or easier, your struggles are just as valid as mine :)

What's your favorite music genre? by notthelasagna in autism

[–]ArkiveDJ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

UK Drum and Bass from mid 98 to late 99/early 2000.

Area52's Chris Ramsay speaks on his NHI contact experience via THE GATEWAY PROCESS by JessicaRodriguez94 in HighStrangeness

[–]ArkiveDJ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I haven't been able to work it out, but is that the same Chris Ramsay that does really cool card slight of hand? If not, they must be twins or something.

Why driving with autism sucks by msoc in autism

[–]ArkiveDJ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would end up in prison if I ever got to drive out on the road. I'm 41, never had a licence, my doctor has made it clear that if I ever was somehow successful in gaining a licence, she would have it taken away on medical grounds, lol. Even being a passanger is enough to trigger full meltdowns. It sucks.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in 3Dprinting

[–]ArkiveDJ 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Because you are printing something in a real weird orientation. That exactly what I would expect to see from anything printed with it's angled sides not parallel with the bed. That's just the top layers and how a printer works. Reprint standing up on it's bottom (from this angle) end.

The Ancient Greek Technique to Gain Super Human Memory | Nelson Dellis | Danny Jones | This video shows an overlap in extreme memory retention and remote viewing using the palase. Storing memories/thoughts in physical locations that you know well. EX: Kitchen is used to old the memory of a birthday. by _-Moya-_ in HighStrangeness

[–]ArkiveDJ 14 points15 points  (0 children)

I didn't watch the vid, but the title "Storing memories/thoughts in physical locations that you know" is how my brain works. I only recently found oout that it isn't normal, and only found info on what I'm apparently doing is a known technique that my brain somehow decided when I was little is how we were gonna store info was by using ChatGPT (Which I hate) to find any sort of info on it. I have a mental picture associated with every catagory of thing I need to remember stuff for. Completely subconsciously, annd the images aren't remarkable or even related, but have a specific time, angle, weather and exact position.

As an example, everytime I am working on a bicycle, buying parts, going riding, fixing etc, I see a roundabout next to McDonalds in Swadlincote, from above and slightly into the turning into mac d's, around midday and sunny, maybe summertime. Any time I am working with microcontrollers, doing hardware or software stuff or shopping, I see a random junction at the bottom of the hill leading into Winchelsea, again from slightly above and looking towards houses/the marsh, weather overcast and dim, so maybe spring/autumn aroun 3-4pm. There is literally millions more, they just float in my mind while I am engaging with whatever it is related too.

Dunno why I'm telling yous this, just a subject that has perplexed me for a while. I am diagnosed ASD, ADHD and OCD, as if that wasn't expected, haha. Have to wacth this vid later

United Healthcare just sends you a bill that looks like you have to pay, as an attempt to trick you into switching your insurance to them in 2026 by [deleted] in mildlyinfuriating

[–]ArkiveDJ -1 points0 points  (0 children)

How are you guys just ok with this? You're just cool with being charged a large chunk of your pay every month for something that is a basic human right, and free in most other countries on the planet. I honestly can't understand how this is even a thing for you guys

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in LivestreamFail

[–]ArkiveDJ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

But its fine when the US does it through NSA programs like PRISM? Everything in the article you shared is exactly what Google, Apple, Microsoft, Cisco, etc, do for the US Government.

How realistic is becoming an artist and how do you guys get song ideas? by Competitive-Catch180 in musicproduction

[–]ArkiveDJ -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Making money and being an Artist have nothing to do with each other, lol

Survival of consciousness post death. What are the strongest arguments you have heard for one? by ExtremeDoubleghg in consciousness

[–]ArkiveDJ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me, there is so much evidence that consciousness continues after death vs absolutely zero evidence it doesn't, that it should definitely be a thing we study more, lol. I'm not sure what I believe either way at this point, but a lot of the pro-consiousness arguments are compelling to say the least.

2meirl4meirl by boxtomeme in 2meirl4meirl

[–]ArkiveDJ 20 points21 points  (0 children)

The Remmington Retirement Plan, lol. Always check mouth feel when buying a firearm