ladybugs

joined 2 weeks ago
 

Looking for a non-Google-based way to identify things from photos, like the species of a tree I’m looking at or the purpose of an object I’m not familiar with

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

That looks far better than the mainstream AI tools, but I don't think respecting opt-outs is quite enough. It would be so much better if it were built from solely opt-in training data. As far as I can tell, it's not attempting to tackle the hallucinations or environmental impact issues. Still, it would be a major change for the better if ChatGPT users switched to something like that.

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

You hit the nail on the head. They produce output that mimics the appearance of a thoughtful response, but isn't that at all. LLMs do not actually think and do not have any concept of truth.

This is probably why things like ClickUp naming their AI tool "Brain" annoys me so much. It's designed partially as a way for organizations to get aggregated access to the major LLMs. So yeah, my former coworkers are getting LLM output from "Clickup Brain." What a marketing scam.

I've been wondering how people's attitudes toward LLMs would shift if society collectively changed the language we used about them to be more accurate. Maybe there wouldn't be so many people claiming "AI is great for research" and whatnot. Even then, though, I doubt people would fully get past the human tendency to trust confident-sounding language.

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

Yes, Google's AI features are horrifying for so many reasons!

I can't fathom all of the hallucinated information spread by Google alone, often to people who weren't even trying to use AI but got an AI overview at the top of their results anyway. Google AI mode is just creating more BS that most people will never notice because they won't check the original source of the information.

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Dang, I wish AI were just things like bird identification tools! That would be a much more wholesome world.

I might actually use and contribute to BirdNET. It looks like it helps with global biodiversity monitoring, which is awesome.

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

I agree. I think to get around 4-7, we'd need a completely different type of AI. We'd need something that isn't an LLM, but that can do some/all of the legitimate things people are trying to use LLMs for.

The vector search thing is nice. I used to sometimes like the automated music recommendations I got on certain streaming services, which I'm guessing worked something like that.

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago

Thank you so much for this! If I get into video editing at some point, I'll totally use CorridorKey for green screen stuff. It actually does check all of my boxes and more. It's a very narrow/specific tool, and it's not something anyone could use to persuade a ChatGPT user to quit, but this gives me hope that other ethical AI tools are possible.

 

Hi, I’m looking for a Google Docs alternative that will show how my drafts change every few minutes. I want to be able to show my writing process (i.e., show that my work isn’t AI-generated.) Either no AI features or the ability to turn them off/remove them from your screen. Ideally I’d like something that works for collaborating on projects, but that’s less important. Any recs?

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago

Oh, of course. Can't believe I didn't get that one right away. Thanks!

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) (2 children)

Hi, sorry for the late comment (just got on Lemmy!), but what's happening in November?

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submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by ladybugs@lemmy.world to c/fuck_ai@lemmy.world
 

A lot of us here hate AI because of how it was built: training data gathered without the creators' explicit, opt-in consent, data centers that negatively affect communities' access to clean water and energy, a technology design that is inherently prone to hallucinations, etc. At least, those are the main reasons why I hate it.

I think I might actually want to support an AI project if I thought it was being done right. Maybe we could get more people away from exploitative models if there was a non-exploitative alternative.

So what would it take to build AI ethically, in your opinion? And do you know of anyone trying to build AI without these issues?

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 7 points 2 weeks ago

Dang, maybe it's time for me to consider re-converting to Catholicism

[–] ladybugs@lemmy.world 2 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

One thing that helps me is thinking of the smallest possible first step, then committing to doing that thing alone. For instance, if I'm having trouble getting myself to write something, I might tell myself to just make a few bullet points of things that need to be included or write a single unedited paragraph. If I'm having trouble studying something I want to study, I might tell myself to make/go through one flashcard. Usually I end up writing more than a few bullet points/that one paragraph and doing far more than one flashcard.