ignirtoq

joined 2 years ago
[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 24 points 5 months ago (8 children)

At least it was better than Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 30 points 5 months ago (1 children)

Part of the reason that this jailbreak worked is that the Windows keys, a mix of Home, Pro, and Enterprise keys, had been trained into the model, Figueroa told The Register.

Isn't that the whole point? They're using prompting tricks to tease out the training data. This has been done several times with copyrighted written works. That's the only reasonable way ChatGPT could produce valid Windows keys. What would be the alternative? ChatGPT somehow reverse engineered the algorithm for generating valid Windows product keys?

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 37 points 5 months ago

They keep tasking these LLMs with things that traditional programming solved a long time ago. There are already vending machines run by computers. They work just fine without AI.

Honestly the computer controlled vending machines are already over-engineered since many of them play ads when you walk up. The last customer-focused feature added was credit card support, and that just needs a credit card reader and a minimal IoT integration. They really shouldn't even have screens.

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 23 points 5 months ago (5 children)

Why are they... why are they having autocomplete recommend medical treatment? There are specialized AI algorithms that already exist for that purpose that do it far better (though still not well enough to even assist real doctors, much less replace them).

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 58 points 6 months ago (3 children)

According to Hui's attorney, she hoped to gain permanent resident status in the U.S. after paying "an American citizen $2,000 to enter into a sham marriage."

She needs to get a new attorney.

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 97 points 6 months ago (5 children)

Even more surprising: the droplets didn’t evaporate quickly, as thermodynamics would predict.

“According to the curvature and size of the droplets, they should have been evaporating,” says Patel. “But they were not; they remained stable for extended periods.”

With a material that could potentially defy the laws of physics on their hands, Lee and Patel sent their design off to a collaborator to see if their results were replicable.

I really don't like the repeated use of the phrase "defy the laws of physics." That's an extraordinary claim, and it needs extraordinary proof, and the researchers already propose a mechanism by which the droplets remained stable under existing physical laws, namely that they were getting replenished from the nanopores inside the material as fast as evaporation was pulling water out of the droplets.

I recognize the researchers themselves aren't using the phrase, it's the Penn press release organization trying to further drum up interest in the research. But it's a bad framing. You can make it sound interesting without resorting to clickbait techniques like "did our awesome engineers just break the laws of physics??" Hell, the research is interesting enough on its own; passive water collection from the air is revolutionary! No need for editorializing!

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 45 points 6 months ago (2 children)

The use of "quantum leap" isn't about comparing the absolute size of the change to quantum phenomena. It's about the lack of a smooth transition. Quantum leaps in physics are instantaneous transitions between states with no intermediate. That's the idea with the colloquialism: a sudden shift from one state to another without a smooth transitional period.

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 25 points 6 months ago (5 children)

France, for instance, has a national policy against the recognition of domestic minority languages like Basque, Breton and Corsican.

Trying to give France the benefit of the doubt, but this just sounds like oppression. Is there a good reason France doesn't recognize minority languages in its territory?

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 8 points 7 months ago

What's the y-axis, and how exactly are you measuring it? Anybody can draw an exponential curve of nothing specific.

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 36 points 8 months ago (1 children)

People are making fun of the waffling and the apparent indecision and are missing the point. Trump isn't flailing and trying to figure out how to actually make things work. He's doing exactly what he intended: he's holding the US economy for ransom and building a power base among the billionaires.

He used the poor and ignorant to get control of the public institutions, and now he's using that power to get control over the private institutions (for-profit companies). He's building a carbon copy of Russia with himself in the role of Putin. He's almost there, and it's taken him 2 months to do it.

[–] ignirtoq@fedia.io 6 points 9 months ago

That matches the hue, but the added dimension is the saturation. Counties in brighter colors are more impacted by retaliatory tariffs, while duller colors are less impacted. The point is to illustrate that a higher proportion of impacted counties voted for Trump than if the impact were spread evenly, though the effect is not that pronounced. Statistically, people working in different industries tend to vote one direction or the other compared to average, but there are still both Harris and Trump voters in every industry.

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