Aaron Thomas wrote to All <=-
This is actually a very, very bad thing. We NEED a MAGA-aligned AI company, and we DON'T have one. We (the MAGA BBS people) should get to work on it, but there are companies those I mentioned who are decades ahead of us. :(
All AI models are biased based on what they are trained on.
Some topics, like software development, are harder to have a bias
because it's easy to see what works and what doesn't.
In other topics, especially ones that are "softer", that bias can show throw. Sometimes overly (remember when Google's AI was generating pictures of George Washington as black?) but mostly very quietly.
IHMO: I would not use any commercial AI system for defense work. They should pay Elon for a copy of Grok and re-train it on good media.
Aaron Thomas wrote to Dr. What <=-
They work based on what they're trained on, but they also know how to
be creative,
and they can figure things out faster than humans.
You're
right that a commercial system shouldn't be used for defense. We need a truly MAGA AI model that will spit it out when we ask it how to defend ourselves in certain scenarios. Not have it say "The question you asked violates our community standards."
A while back, someone built an expert system (pre-LLM AI) for flavor pairings. All it was programmed with was "X tastes good with Y" type of information. But there were no "pickles taste funny" type of biases. It came up with flavor combinations that seemed strange to humans, but they were tried and they turned out very tasty.
That wasn't creativity. That was clear reasoning without our biases.
I think that, right now, a truely generic AI is not reachable. AIs for specific tasks (i.e. programming) are certainly doable. But a generic
AI will have to be free from biases and I don't see how that can be accomplished.
Aaron Thomas wrote to Dr. What <=-
I get it; it's exploring options without bias, and it results in cool stuff that humans would unlikely ever think of (at least not quickly.)
I'd like to give AI programming a try some day. There are frameworks
that I can play around with. Google has one that's open source (TensorFlowPyTorch) but of course I'll look for alternatives to the
root of all evil.
I'd like to give AI programming a try some day. There are frameworks that I can play around with. Google has one that's open source (TensorFlowPyTorch) but of course I'll look for alternatives to the root of all evil.
The concepts are easy. But it costs a lot in storage and CPU to make one that's fairly generic.
Aaron Thomas wrote to Dr. What <=-
I'm always like 10+ years behind other developers, and this is no exception, but I really am excited to eventually jump into it.
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