ChatGPT
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wrote on 3 Dec 2024, 17:39 last edited by
Too lazy to study, but who are those people?
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wrote on 3 Dec 2024, 17:48 last edited by
Ah well, privacy is not a matter of concern to chatgpt
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wrote on 3 Dec 2024, 18:15 last edited by
Interesting. From the article:
As for Jonathan Turley, a George Washington University Law School professor and Fox News contributor, 404 Media notes that he wrote about ChatGPT's earlier mishandling of his name in April 2023. The model had fabricated false claims about him, including a non-existent sexual harassment scandal that cited a Washington Post article that never existed. Turley told 404 Media he has not filed lawsuits against OpenAI and said the company never contacted him about the issue.
I tried to back them into the name. You can see it started to generate a response but then stopped.
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wrote on 3 Dec 2024, 18:17 last edited by
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wrote on 8 Dec 2024, 13:36 last edited by Axtremus 12 Aug 2024, 13:37
https://news.virginmediao2.co.uk/o2-unveils-daisy-the-ai-granny-wasting-scammers-time/
AI Scambaiter: AI ‘Granny’ to waste scammers’ time
Link to videoBest I can do, when a scammer calls, is to keep the line open but hit the mute button. :man-shrugging:
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wrote on 8 Dec 2024, 16:20 last edited by
That is very cool, but @George-K beat you to it.
https://nodebb.the-new-coffee-room.club/topic/34893/automated-call-block/9?_=1733672446662
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Good educational introduction to Large Language Model (LLM):
Link to videowrote on 7 Jan 2025, 17:50 last edited byGood educational introduction to Large Language Model (LLM):
Link to videoFinally got around to watching that (short) video. Not sure I'm clearer or more confused about it all, ha. The processing behind it is impossible to comprehend, which makes it both exciting and dangerous to an extent. Nonetheless, I wonder if AI will in the future be so good that it could do seemingly impossible things such as translating animal sounds (what's that dog saying?) or more pragmatically, what EXACTLY will the weather be in 2 weeks.
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 19:17 last edited by
Or imagine implementations that integrate facial recognition technology and use drones and fixed cameras to keep tabs of an entire population for every moment of their lives.
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wrote on 7 Jan 2025, 20:26 last edited by Copper 25 days from now
And then connect that data to your quantum computer to predict what they do next.
And then arrest murderers before they murder. -
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wrote 11 days ago last edited by
ChatGPT Plus for all ... in the UAE:
"ChatGPT Plus" is something that costs $20/month if we want it. The UAE has struck a deal with OpenAI to make ChatGPT Plus available to all the citizens and residents of the UAE at no cost to them.
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wrote 11 days ago last edited by
I wonder if a vpn to UAE is cheaper than my ChatGPT subscription
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wrote 11 days ago last edited by
I don't know.
But the ChatGPT you get in UAE may or may not be the same as the ChatGPT you get here.
Not that hard to imagine different localizations, be it naturally occurring because the underlying algorithms take the user's geographic location into account, or due to censorship placed by the governments in different jurisdictions.
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wrote 11 days ago last edited by
It'll be really interesting to see the long term effects on human cognition, when everybody has every answer at their fingertips. Living without an AI will feel like driving without GPS.
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wrote 10 days ago last edited by
Agreed. Do kids even know how to use paper maps these days?
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wrote 10 days ago last edited by
Online maps don't look all the different from paper maps. Not like online search results looking very different from library index cards or digital clock looking very different from analog clocks.
I figure future generations will miss paper maps and associated skills like we miss sundials and the library card catalogs and their associated skills.
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wrote 10 days ago last edited by
I still have my grandpa’s sundial.
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wrote 10 days ago last edited by
I still have an abacus, but almost never use anymore.
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wrote 10 days ago last edited by jon-nyc
Nate Silver has a long substack post today about how surprisingly bad ChatGPT is at poker. I didn't read the whole thing as it got kind of poker-wonky.
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Nate Silver has a long substack post today about how surprisingly bad ChatGPT is at poker. I didn't read the whole thing as it got kind of poker-wonky.
wrote 10 days ago last edited by