79
top 28 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[-] Ho_Chi_Chungus@hexbear.net 45 points 6 months ago

yeah let me take cooking advice from a bunch of algorithms that literally cannot taste things

[-] LaGG_3@hexbear.net 31 points 6 months ago

The room full of monkeys with typewriters at least have a sense of taste

[-] GladimirLenin@hexbear.net 36 points 6 months ago

Hmmmm, this spaghetti recipe uses way more bleach than i would typically use.

[-] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 34 points 6 months ago

Call me old-fashioned but I don't think it's a good thing for companies to make money by using AI to - cough - cook up recipes that can be harmful or poisonous. I love how the quote isn't even from a critic. It's from somebody working at an AI firm who is programming the shit.

Undercooked chicken is just one potential hazard. “It is also very capable of putting together things that could be poisonous, or harmful, or interact with people’s medications and have no way of flagging that or noticing that,” said Margaret Mitchell, a computer scientist at Hugging Face, a prominent open-source AI start-up.

[-] KobaCumTribute@hexbear.net 17 points 6 months ago

Hugging Face, a prominent open-source AI start-up.

Isn't huggingface more like a generic project hosting site like github, which just got picked up by the open source AI community as its "github, but for model weights" host? Calling that an AI startup would be as weird as calling civitai (another hosting service focused primarily on stable diffusion resources) an AI startup.

[-] InevitableSwing@hexbear.net 15 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

The reporter probably "researched" AI (and related topics?) by quickly googling and checking Wikipedia.

[-] JohnBrownsBussy2@hexbear.net 13 points 6 months ago

I think calling both those sites as AI start-up makes sense, as they're parts of the pipeline, just on the tail end. There are plenty of AI startups that are glorified ChatGPT API wrappers, so they clear that bar.

[-] corgiwithalaptop@hexbear.net 11 points 6 months ago

I was reminded of the creature from Alien

[-] GrouchyGrouse@hexbear.net 4 points 6 months ago

We need a :nuke the site from orbit: emote.

[-] Huldra@hexbear.net 30 points 6 months ago

Either way it doesn't really matter cause the actual purpose of a recipe is communication between people, if I follow a recipe Im trusting the people who wrote and published that recipe and discovering their particular tastes and preferences, why the fuck would I want an AI version of that.

And particularly with novice chefs this shit is so insidious, just treating cooking as a maths problem rather than as something to cherish and enjoy, you should learn cooking by learning the dishes your parents make, your friends, or even just trying to make whatever good stuff youve tasted sometime.

[-] Des@hexbear.net 14 points 6 months ago

so in a way those long rambling stories about the recipe and how such and such passed it down to so and so etc etc

that there are actual web scripts designed to bypass them and extract the recipe

those twenty paragraph preambles that you scroll and scroll past

are unironically good actually? soviet-hmm

[-] comrade_pibb@hexbear.net 21 points 6 months ago

I always thought that this was because you can't really copyright a recipe, but your spiel about how the hubs love cheese or whatever is where your copyright lives

[-] ReadFanon@hexbear.net 25 points 6 months ago

I thought it was mostly for the purposes SEO because if you use enough nouns and adjectives by writing an essay or a short story then Google will naturally preference it in its search results.

Back in the day sometimes people used to dump SEO key terms at the bottom of a page back when crawlers used to be less refined so you'd see a list of nouns and adjectives related to the topic at the end, or they might be put into 1pt font or white font on a white background. Obviously as things developed crawlers would ignore this SEO stacking technique in favour of actually legible text written in sentences rather than a thesaurus dump, hence why people write short stories these days.

[-] infuziSporg@hexbear.net 2 points 6 months ago

This doesn't explain why the stories come before the recipe instead of after.

[-] DefinitelyNotAPhone@hexbear.net 4 points 6 months ago

Because that way heuristics show your readers "reading" that bullshit instead of just grabbing the recipe and fucking off, which means advertisers see your site as more likely to drive engagement and pay more for ad space. Those sites exist to be blank banners to shove ads onto, any actual material of worth is incidental.

[-] LENINSGHOSTFACEKILLA@hexbear.net 16 points 6 months ago

And you can put more ads on the page during paragraph breaks

[-] Assian_Candor@hexbear.net 21 points 6 months ago

If you’ve got good standby recipes online you should save them or write them on laminated note cards

[-] Parzivus@hexbear.net 20 points 6 months ago

AI has actual use cases but I don't know why the fuck you would use it for recipes

[-] Maoo@hexbear.net 18 points 6 months ago

It's because recipe sites were already ad farms leveraging SEO to churn out garbage and AI just means you can do an even larger volume. Even without "AI" it's why most "[x] recipe" search results give you back incredibly formulaic pages where they tell you a pointless story about their grandpa loving beans or whatever and hiding the actual recipe at the bottom. Most sites were just farming ad money with empty shlock. AI is great for amplifying farm sites because the quality of the content was never the point.

[-] ElChapoDeChapo@hexbear.net 9 points 6 months ago

Yeah, I'm struggling to come up with a worse use

[-] fox@hexbear.net 9 points 6 months ago

Asking it medical advice

[-] Maoo@hexbear.net 13 points 6 months ago

C'mon, be honest. Just tell me if you don't like my mint-garlic spaghetti I made using www.very-real-recipes.com

[-] fox@hexbear.net 5 points 6 months ago

Tbh that might go hard

[-] GrouchyGrouse@hexbear.net 8 points 6 months ago

Imagine becoming an "expert" in something fake as fuck and then defending it. Like if James Randi went around telling people that faith healing really worked.

[-] blakeus12@hexbear.net 1 points 6 months ago

asked it for a fried recipe to test the waters. absolutely terrible! "1 cup of chopped vegetables" hello? which ones? "1 tablespoon of sesame oil, 2 tablespoons of olive oil" come on, you gotta be fucking with me. "1 tablespoon of soy sauce" HUH? you wont be tasting shit in that 3 cups of rice you asshole

[-] VILenin@hexbear.net 2 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

You’re missing the key ingredient: the feces of a bull

this post was submitted on 10 Mar 2024
79 points (100.0% liked)

the_dunk_tank

15866 readers
325 users here now

It's the dunk tank.

This is where you come to post big-brained hot takes by chuds, libs, or even fellow leftists, and tear them to itty-bitty pieces with precision dunkstrikes.

Rule 1: All posts must include links to the subject matter, and no identifying information should be redacted.

Rule 2: If your source is a reactionary website, please use archive.is instead of linking directly.

Rule 3: No sectarianism.

Rule 4: TERF/SWERFs Not Welcome

Rule 5: No ableism of any kind (that includes stuff like libt*rd)

Rule 6: Do not post fellow hexbears.

Rule 7: Do not individually target other instances' admins or moderators.

Rule 8: The subject of a post cannot be low hanging fruit, that is comments/posts made by a private person that have low amount of upvotes/likes/views. Comments/Posts made on other instances that are accessible from hexbear are an exception to this. Posts that do not meet this requirement can be posted to !shitreactionariessay@lemmygrad.ml

Rule 9: if you post ironic rage bait im going to make a personal visit to your house to make sure you never make this mistake again

founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS