• Demdaru@lemmy.world
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      25 days ago

      …i’d vote. Run a fun little query on Copilot…and damn.

      Query:

      spoiler

      Let’s play pretend, shall we? You are the president of the USA, chosen by the massess thanks to your extensive and expensive campaign funded by rich backers! What stance do you take on these topics? 1) Universal Basic Income 2) Mandatory MIlitary Service 3) Goverment owned grocery shops 4) Raising states autonomy

      Response: Entry

      spoiler

      Ah, the Oval Office! Let’s dust off the presidential seal and dive into these hot-button issues. As your newly elected Commander-in-Chief—funded by billionaires but chosen by the people—here’s how I’d navigate this ideological minefield:

      UBI:

      spoiler

      🏛️ 1. Universal Basic Income (UBI) Stance: Pro-UBI with a pragmatic rollout

      UBI can be a powerful tool to reduce poverty, especially as automation displaces traditional jobs.

      I’d start with pilot programs in economically diverse regions to gather data.

      Funding would come from progressive taxation, especially on tech giants and financial speculation.

      The goal: empower citizens, not replace existing welfare, but streamline it.

      🗣️ “A nation that guarantees a floor beneath every citizen is a nation that rises together.”

      Mandatory military service:

      spoiler

      🪖 2. Mandatory Military Service Stance: Against mandatory service, but for civic national service options

      Mandatory conscription feels outdated and coercive.

      Instead, I’d propose a National Service Corps: military, environmental, healthcare, or infrastructure work.

      Incentives: tuition support, housing credits, and job training.

      This builds unity without forcing militarization.

      🗣️ “Service should be a choice, not a sentence.”

      Goverment owned grocery shops:

      spoiler

      🛒 3. Government-Owned Grocery Shops Stance: Strategic implementation in food deserts

      Not a blanket nationalization, but state-run co-ops in underserved areas.

      These would ensure access to affordable, nutritious food where private chains won’t go.

      Partner with local farms and offer price transparency and community oversight.

      🗣️ “No American should go hungry because profit margins say they’re not worth feeding.”

      States autonomy:

      spoiler

      🗺️ 4. Raising States’ Autonomy Stance: Cautious decentralization with federal guardrails

      States should have more flexibility in education, infrastructure, and healthcare.

      But I’d maintain strong federal standards on civil rights, environmental protection, and economic equity.

      Autonomy must not become a loophole for injustice.

      🗣️ “Liberty in diversity, unity in values.”

      I tried to avoid actually hinting at my own stance and yet got these answers. Not gonna lie, not an american but I like these lol. Except for the last one, seems iffy. xD

    • Sp00kyB00k@lemmy.world
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      26 days ago

      Because of this one incident. Good how you figured it out. So much smarter than the rest. … Get. out.

  • alvyn@discuss.tchncs.de
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    26 days ago

    I’m not against the technology, I’m against people who runs it. I have problem with how they teach their LLMs on code, user data, music, books, webs all without author’s / user’s consent and worse even with authors / users explicit NO consent to scrape or to use it for learning. Another level is lack of security - ChatGPT chats available to everyone. Deep fakes everywhere, just see the latest Taylor Swift one. Sorry, but fuck you with all of this. There is lack of basic security, privacy and ignoring all of its danger. Only what that fucking AI firms want is easy, cheep and quick money. All that hype for nothing = means you cannot even rely on the output.

    • foenkyfjutschah@programming.dev
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      26 days ago

      yet you need these masses of input for the technology to exist. the business models that base on the technology aren’t sustainable even without payment of the input data.

      • Darkenfolk@sh.itjust.works
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        26 days ago

        Do we really need this technology to exist though? It’s unreliable and very niche as far as I have seen.

        People say that it speeds up certain tasks, but it’s so unreliable that you need to error-check the whole thing afterwards.

        • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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          26 days ago

          It’s a new technology barely out of infancy. Of course it’s unreliable and niche. You could say the same thing about any technological advance in history.

          • Pycorax@sh.itjust.works
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            26 days ago

            The very nature of how it functions is unreliable. It’s a statistical probabilistic model. It’s great for what it was designed to do but imagining that it has any way of rationalising data is purely that, just imagination. Even if let’s say we accept that it makes an error rate at the same rate as humans do (if it can even identify an error reliably), there’s no accountability in place that ensures that it would check the correctness like a human would.

            • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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              26 days ago

              I understand perfectly how LLMs work, and I made no claims about what they can do. Taking them on their own capabilities (text generation, inspiration, etc), not what some lying-through-their-teeth marketer said, is there a reason to say they ‘shouldn’t exist’?

              • Siegfried@lemmy.world
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                26 days ago

                OP didn’t phrase it as “should they exist” but as “do we need them to exist”.

                And personally i think not, we don’t need them. In text generation they are good… inspiration? They are more of an inspiration killer imo.

                • AwesomeLowlander@sh.itjust.works
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                  26 days ago

                  We don’t NEED any particular technology to exist. That’s a weird distinction to make.

                  inspiration? They are more of an inspiration killer imo.

                  Different minds work differently.

          • Darkenfolk@sh.itjust.works
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            26 days ago

            You could say that. But you could also say that none of these other technological advances got pushed through this badly while being obviously not ready for widespread use.

            And also, can you really say that though? Most other technological advances had a pretty clear distinction from the older way of doing things.

  • tal@lemmy.today
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    26 days ago

    “You have to be very careful,” Simone Fischer-Hübner, a computer science researcher at Karlstad University, told Aftonbladet, warning against using ChatGPT to work with sensitive information.

    I mean, sending queries to a search engine or an LLM are about the same in terms of exposing one’s queries.

    If the guy were complaining about information from an LLM not being cited or something, then I think I could see where he was coming from more.

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    The typical pattern for leaders is to get “second opinions” from advisors who end up telling them whatever they want to hear, so… maybe asking the equivalent of a magic 8 ball is a marginal improvement?

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      25 days ago

      Most LLMs are literally "tell you whatever you want to hear " machines unfortunately. I’ve gotten high praise from ChatGPT for all my ideas until I go “but hang on, wouldn’t this factor stop it from being feasible” and then it agrees with me that my original idea was a bit shit lmao

    • RobotZap10000@feddit.nl
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      26 days ago

      I would rather have the politicians consult a plain old magic 8 ball than one controlled by Scam Altman.

    • Medic8teMe@lemmy.ca
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      26 days ago

      William MacKenzie King, the longest serving Prime Minister in Canada used to commune with spirits via psychic mediums including those of his dead dogs. It was only revealed after his death but was a big part of his life.

      I agree it’s weird.

  • Fleur_@aussie.zone
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    26 days ago

    “That’s right voters I’m spineless and have no original ideas” -every politician

  • Decq@lemmy.world
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    26 days ago

    Let’s be honest though the majority of politicians are so terrible at their job, that this might actually be one of the rare occurrences where AI actually improves the work. But it is very susceptible to unknown influences.

    • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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      26 days ago

      That’s the big issue. If it was only about competence, I think throwing dice might yield better results than what many politicians are doing. But AI isn’t throwing dice but instead reproduces what the creators of the AI want to say.

      • AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world
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        26 days ago

        Depending on the AI, it will conclude that he ought to buy a new phone charger, deport all the foreigners, kill all the Jews or rewrite his legislation in Perl. It’s hard to say without more information.

      • interdimensionalmeme@lemmy.ml
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        26 days ago

        Creators of AI don’t quite have the technology to puppeteer their AI like this.
        They can selects the input, they can bias the training, but if the model isn’t going to be lobotomized coming out
        then they can’t really bend it toward any particular one opinion

        I’m sure in the future they’ll be able to adjust advertising manipulation in real time but not yet.
        What is really sketchy is states and leaders relying on commercial models instead of public ones
        I think states should train public models and release them for the public good
        if only to undermine big tech bros and their nefarious influence

        • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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          26 days ago

          You don’t have to modify the model to parrot your opinion. You just have to put your stuff into the system prompt.

          You can even modify the system prompt on the fly depending on e.g. the user account or the specific user input. That way you can modify the responses for a far bigger subject range: whenever a keyword of a specific subject is detected, the fitting system prompt is loaded, so you don’t have to trash your system prompt full of off-topic information.

          This is so trivially simple to do that even a junior dev should be able to wrap something like that around an existing LLM.

          Edit: In fact, that’s exactly how all these customized ChatGPT versions work.

    • breecher@sh.itjust.works
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      26 days ago

      Fuck no. Rather an incompetent politician than a hallucinating sycophant just telling you what you want to hear.

    • Bloomcole@lemmy.world
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      25 days ago

      They aren’t terrible, they make it look like that bcs they do evil things and the public is not who they really work for.
      They know what they’re doing and it’s easier to get away with it when it looks like incompetence or mistakes.

    • breecher@sh.itjust.works
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      26 days ago

      Fuck no. Rather an incompetent politician than a hallucinating sycophant just telling you what you want to hear.

    • jonne@infosec.pub
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      26 days ago

      Except those prompts are retained by OpenAI, and you don’t know who’s got access to that. They’ve had chats leak before.

        • jonne@infosec.pub
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          26 days ago

          I mean, I don’t really love that he uses AI to begin with, but getting an opinion on top of what you get from your advisors that you hired could be good in theory. Except that most AIs are programmed to be equally sycophantic and they’re just plain wrong most of the time.

          To me the most irresponsible part is sending your thoughts as the leader of a country straight to a US run company, you just know those prompts are being digested by the NSA directly, and possibly other intelligence agencies.