Any tool can be a hammer if you use it wrong enough.

A good hammer is designed to be a hammer and only used like a hammer.

If you have a fancy new hammer, everything looks like a nail.

  • friend_of_satan@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Some hammers use enough energy to power a small country in order to show you a cake recipe without an entire backstory and 50 ads.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Welcome to capitalism.

    AI is the new thing, so cramming it into a product increase funding and/or stock price.

    Even if it hurts the product.

    • vzq@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 months ago

      Even if it hurts the product

      Because the product is not the product. The stock valuation is the product.

  • Flax@feddit.uk
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    5 months ago

    It’s not good at replacing your job, but good at convincing your boss that it can

  • Dagwood222@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    Nope. It’s more like that weird thing you brought at 3 am off of the Home Shopping Network because you were in a really bad place and thought it would make you feel better.

    Now it’s taking up space and you don’t want to throw it out because that would mean you’re a failure…

  • kibiz0r@midwest.social
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    5 months ago

    It’s more like Jefferson’s dumbwaiter, in that it was created by someone who verbally supported an egalitarian utopian vision of society, but the device itself is a scale model of an exploitative social system. At one station of the device, unpaid/low-paid labor operates out of view of the user, and then at the other station, the user enjoys an almost-magical appearance of an answer to their request.

    No tool is “just a tool”, after all. In that way, AI is like a hammer.

    (That section of the video leans heavily on Do Artifacts Have Politics?, which is a pretty short and accessible essay. If you’re not convinced that artifacts do have politics, and you don’t want to watch the video, just read a few paragraphs of the essay.)

  • Suzune@ani.social
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    5 months ago

    Basically what I said to people who asked me about my opinion on AI.

    Exactly it was: “AI is a tool like a hammer. If you hit your finger, don’t complain about the tool, but because you simply used it wrong.”

      • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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        5 months ago

        True.

        And I get where you’re going, but pipe wrenches are still way too useful in too many situations. AI is a like a disc brake compressor hand tool, being sold as the solution to everything else.

        When I mention how much I like it for compressing a disc brake, I feel like people look at me like I’m crazy for falling off the hype train.

        Edit: And by people, I mean AI hype shill bots, probably.

  • macniel@feddit.org
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    5 months ago

    calling (mm)LLMs AI is just corpo bullshit. But hey, it’s fancy, right?

    • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 months ago

      I don’t see the “is not actual AI” argument.

      Since the 80 AI has just been algorithms and proposals for neural networks.

      It never has need to have a “soul” or “be sentient” to be Artificial Intelligence.

      Even a simple Tic Tac Toc opponent algorithm has been called AI without much complaining about it.

      Also AI didn’t got called AI by corporations. That naming for the technology dates from where it was being proposed as concepts in universities.

    • 0laura@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      you not liking it doesn’t make it any less ai. I don’t remember that many people complaining when we called the code controlling video game characters ai.

      • macniel@feddit.org
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        5 months ago

        pretty sure that they were and still are called Bots though, atleast in the context of first person shooter.

      • kescusay@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        Software developer, here.

        It’s not actually AI. A large language model is essentially autocomplete on steroids. Very useful in some contexts, but it doesn’t “learn” the way a neural network can. When you’re feeding corrections into, say, ChatGPT, you’re making small, temporary, cached adjustments to its data model, but you’re not actually teaching it anything, because by its nature, it can’t learn.

        I’m not trying to diss LLMs, by the way. Like I said, they can be very useful in some contexts. I use Copilot to assist with coding, for example. Don’t want to write a bunch of boilerplate code? Copilot is excellent for speeding that process up.

        • celliern@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          LLMs are part of AI, which is a fairly large research domain of math/info, including machine learning among other. God, even linear regression can be classified as AI : that term is reeeally large

          • kescusay@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            I mean, I guess the way people use the term “AI” these days, sure, but we’re really beating all specificity out of the term.

            • celliern@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              This is a domain research domain that contain statistic methods and knowledge modeling among other. That’s not new, but the fact that this is marketed like that everywhere is new

              AI is really not a specific term. You may refer as global AI, and I suspect that’s what you refer to when you say AI?

            • 0laura@lemmy.world
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              5 months ago

              it’s always been this broad, and that’s a good thing. if you want to talk about AGI then say AGI.

        • 0laura@lemmy.world
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          5 months ago

          I know that they’re “autocorrect on steroids” and what that means, I don’t see how that makes it any less ai. I’m not saying that LLMs have that magic sauce that is needed to be considered truly “intelligent”, I’m saying that ai doesn’t need any magic sauce to be ai. the code controlling bats in Minecraft is called ai, and no one complained about that.

        • Zos_Kia@lemmynsfw.com
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          5 months ago

          Very useful in some contexts, but it doesn’t “learn” the way a neural network can. When you’re feeding corrections into, say, ChatGPT, you’re making small, temporary, cached adjustments to its data model, but you’re not actually teaching it anything, because by its nature, it can’t learn.

          But that’s true of all (most ?) neural networks ? Are you saying Neural Networks are not AI and that they can’t learn ?

          NNs don’t retrain while they are being used, they are trained once then they cannot learn new behaviour or correct existing behaviour. If you want to make them better you need to run them a bunch of times, collect and annotate good/bad runs, then re-train them from scratch (or fine-tune them) with this new data. Just like LLMs because LLMs are neural networks.

      • Jomega@lemmy.world
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        5 months ago

        That’s because in that context it stands for Action Instruction, not Artificial Intelligence.

    • lmaydev@lemmy.world
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      5 months ago

      They are neural networks which are some of the oldest AI tech we have.

      You can hate them, but they are by definition AI.

  • hahattpro@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I am really piss off when Reddit use AI to shadowbanned my account. They never tell the reason. They just hide my interaction to outerworld, assuming that i am dumb and never found out.

    As a result, all subsequent accounts i try to create are shadowbanned after 5 minutes because my phone in blacklist.

      • jet@hackertalks.com
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        5 months ago

        I wouldn’t even call this AI, they just have an algorithm. That’s poorly tuned.

        I encountered the same issue, and that’s exactly why I’m here on Lemmy. Reddit and it’s Shadow banning habits have to go away.

        I don’t like having persistent social accounts, so I make a new one for each topic, Reddit, GitHub. Purpose specific accounts to do one thing. And for the last few years, every time I create an account like that, it’s immediately shadow banned. It’s frustrating, because my contributions are now thrown away, and it’s dishonest, because these services don’t have the politeness to even tell you you’re not allowed to participate.

        Because of that, a federated system like Lemmy must survive. That’s why we’re here