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Cake day: Jun 22, 2023

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It’s not really fine if you like roaming around, though. There isn’t much of an open world, just many many small worlds with hand-placed POIs on some of them and procedurally generated stuff on the rest

I’m having a good time with the game but it definitely doesn’t scratch the same itch



Nostalgia goggles are a thing, though. People have HD memories of what they enjoyed and some people don’t like actually facing their low-def reality.


The work is not reproduced in its entirety. Simply using the work in its entirety is not a violation of copyright law, just as reading a book or watching a movie (even if pirated) is not a violation. The reproduction of that work is the violation, and LLMs simply do not store the works in their entirety nor are they capable of reproducing them.


The argument is less that an LLM is a human and more that it is not a copyright violation to use a material to train the LLM. By current legal definitions, it is fair use unless the material is able to be reproduced in its entirety (or at least, in some meaningful way).


It’s only black box because nobody has the time (likely years to decades) to wade through the layers of a finished model to check every node and weight.

This is exactly correct, except you’re also not accounting for the insane amount of computational power that would be necessary to backtrack a single output of a single model. This is why it is a black box. It simply is not possible on a meaningful level.

So if math and computer science isn’t an exact science, what is?

Things that are reproducible with known inputs and outputs, allowing for all components to be studied and explained. As an example from my field: if you damage the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex in a fully grown adult, they will have the impulse control of a three-year old. We know this because we have observed damage to this area in multiple individuals, and can measure the effects based on the severity of that damage.

In contrast, if you provide the same billion-parameter neural network identical inputs, you will not receive identical outputs.


Look, I understand why you think this. I thought this too when I was first beginning to learn machine learning and data science. But I’ve now been working with machine learning models including neural networks for nearly a decade, and the truth is that is nearly impossible to track the path of an input to a given output in machine learning models other than regression-based models and decision tree-based models.

There is an entire field of data science devoted to explaining how these models arrive at their conclusions. It’s called “explainable AI” or “xAI”, and I have a few papers that I’ve published in exploring the utility of them. The basic explanation for how they work is that we run hundreds of thousands of different models and then do statistical analysis to estimate why the models arrived at their conclusion. It isn’t an exact science, however.


You really don’t understand how these models work and you should learn about them before you make statements about them.

Machine learning models are, almost by definition, non-deterministic.


Neither citation nor compensation are necessary for fair use, which is what occurs when an original work is used for its concepts but not reproduced.


I agree. But that isn’t what AI is doing, because it doesn’t store the actual book and it isn’t possible to reproduce any part in a format that is recognizable as the original work.


LOL

We understand less about how LLMs generate a single output than we do about the human brain. You clearly have no experience developing models.


I don’t need to negotiate with Sarah Silverman if Im handed her book by a friend, and neither should an AI


It’s a comedy video about NPCs


Land on a planet, you step off the ship, and you suddenly get captured. Hard cut to black.

Slow fade in… “you’re finally awake”


That’s irrelevant. The plaintiff bought the FSD package and his attorney (not prosecutor, I missed that this was a civil suit not criminal trial) will likely argue that it introduced confusion on the part of his client. It doesn’t matter that the FSD package wasn’t actually in use if the plaintiff believed it was (or, more importantly, that he believed it could do things that it could not due to the confusing terminology)


Sigh…

Jonathan Michaels, an attorney for the plaintiffs, in his opening statement at the trial in Riverside, California, said that when the 37-year-old Lee bought Tesla’s “full self-driving capability package” for $6,000 for his Model 3 in 2019, the system was in “beta,” meaning it was not yet ready for release.

RTFA


The way it is marketed is not in line with it’s functionality. I expect the prosecution will claim the term “Full Self Driving” is confusing to consumers


Remember that the free version of Unity is completely free and no money gets sent to Unity. Boycotting all Unity games only hurts the devs, except when you know the game was made with a Pro version


The concept isn’t, I agree. But it also isn’t a useful idea, either. There really doesn’t appear to be any benefit to using NFTs in any meaningful application, or at least nobody has pitched one that isn’t either a grift or a way to appear “trendy” by reinventing the wheel.


No, they wouldn’t have. Because owning a link to a thing doesn’t mean anything, no matter what that thing is. They were only valuable because people didn’t understand NFTs and wanted to get rich quick.


Despite Google being heavily invested in the advertising space, they have always been terrible at advertising their own products. It almost seems like the top brass don’t actually care about their non-search products at all.



Technically next year is in ~3.5 months. It could launch in January


16gb isn’t really a lot of RAM nowadays, though


Awesome! Do you have a thingiverse link?


Interesting side effect is Reddit is basically penalizing voting, since if you vote on most comments you end up doubling or tripling your API usage. The best way to pay less for this app is to stop voting altogether.

Reddit’s advertising is based on user engagement, so they’re shooting themselves in the foot for a few pennies in comparison.


So because the average person is aware that it’s difficult to download off YouTube, that means any attempt to make it easier is “acting in bad faith”?

Is it “bad faith” to replace your phone’s battery because it requires some specialized tools? Is it “bad faith” to change the oil in your car instead of bringing it to a service center?


Were you not aware that they are an unprofitable company that was just recently saddled with an unbelievably enormous sum of debt?


Those are all still AI. Scientists still have a functional definition that includes these plus more scripted AI like in video games.

Essentially, any algorithm that learns and acts on information that has not been explicitly programmed is considered AI.


I remember this article. It’s the reason why I now have a laptop prepared and ready to give my son for his fifth birthday.


The only crime here is the crime against humanity of taking away a person’s agency over their own body