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Intelligence explosion arguments don’t require Platonism. They just require intelligence to exist in the normal fuzzy way that all concepts exist.

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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by sisyphean@programming.dev to c/auai@programming.dev

At OpenAI, protecting user data is fundamental to our mission. We do not train our models on inputs and outputs through our API.

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We’re rolling out custom instructions to give you more control over how ChatGPT responds. Set your preferences, and ChatGPT will keep them in mind for all future conversations.

@AutoTLDR

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GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 are the two most widely used large language model (LLM) services. However, when and how these models are updated over time is opaque. Here, we evaluate the March 2023 and June 2023 versions of GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 on four diverse tasks: 1) solving math problems, 2) answering sensitive/dangerous questions, 3) generating code and 4) visual reasoning. We find that the performance and behavior of both GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 can vary greatly over time. For example, GPT-4 (March 2023) was very good at identifying prime numbers (accuracy 97.6%) but GPT-4 (June 2023) was very poor on these same questions (accuracy 2.4%). Interestingly GPT-3.5 (June 2023) was much better than GPT-3.5 (March 2023) in this task. GPT-4 was less willing to answer sensitive questions in June than in March, and both GPT-4 and GPT-3.5 had more formatting mistakes in code generation in June than in March. Overall, our findings shows that the behavior of the “same” LLM service can change substantially in a relatively short amount of time, highlighting the need for continuous monitoring of LLM quality.

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Llama 2 - Meta AI (ai.meta.com)

Introducing Llama 2 - The next generation of our open source large language model. Llama 2 is available for free for research and commercial use.

This release includes model weights and starting code for pretrained and fine-tuned Llama language models — ranging from 7B to 70B parameters.

@AutoTLDR

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16 Mar, 2023

Kagi Search is pleased to announce the introduction of three AI features into our product offering.

We’d like to discuss how we see AI’s role in search, what are the challenges and our AI integration philosophy. Finally, we will be going over the features we are launching today.

@AutoTLDR

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submitted 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago) by sisyphean@programming.dev to c/auai@programming.dev

This is a game that tests your ability to predict ("forecast") how well GPT-4 will perform at various types of questions. (In caase you've been living under a rock these last few months, GPT-4 is a state-of-the-art "AI" language model that can solve all kinds of tasks.)

Many people speak very confidently about what capabilities large language models do and do not have (and sometimes even could or could never have). I get the impression that most people who make such claims don't even know what current models can do. So: put yourself to the test.

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Increasingly powerful AI systems are being released at an increasingly rapid pace. This week saw the debut of Claude 2, likely the second most capable AI system available to the public. The week before, Open AI released Code Interpreter, the most sophisticated mode of AI yet available. The week before that, some AIs got the ability to see images.

And yet not a single AI lab seems to have provided any user documentation. Instead, the only user guides out there appear to be Twitter influencer threads. Documentation-by-rumor is a weird choice for organizations claiming to be concerned about proper use of their technologies, but here we are.

@AutoTLDR

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TL;DR: (by GPT-4 🤖)

The article by Chandler Kilpatrick on Medium discusses the new Code Interpreter feature of ChatGPT, which has been released to Beta from its previous Alpha testing phase. The Code Interpreter enhances ChatGPT's ability to process, generate, manipulate, and run code, currently supporting only Python. Users can upload files (with a limit of 100 MB per file) for the AI to interact with, although it cannot edit files directly. The Code Interpreter can be used in various fields such as software development, data analytics, documentation, and education, helping with tasks like code generation, error detection, code refactoring, creating data visualizations, and providing real-time programming tutoring. The article also highlights some impressive feats accomplished by users, including recreating the game Flappy Bird in less than 10 minutes.

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LLM is my command-line utility and Python library for working with large language models such as GPT-4. I just released version 0.5 with a huge new feature: you can now install plugins that add support for additional models to the tool, including models that can run on your own hardware.

@AutoTLDR

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An AI-first notebook, grounded in your own documents, designed to help you gain insights faster.

@AutoTLDR

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 2 points 1 year ago

It isn’t available outside the US and the UK, so I can’t try it yet, but I will as soon as I get access.

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

@AutoTLDR the other bot talks too much, please summarize this

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 16 points 1 year ago

Lol that’s like saying there’s too much porn on /r/gonewild

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago

If I remember correctly, the properties the API returns are comment_score and post_score.

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 6 points 1 year ago

Lemmy does have karma, it is stored in the DB, and the API returns it. It just isn’t displayed on the UI.

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

Wow, an actually good summary of what the problem is with Reddit

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 4 points 1 year ago

I think the incentives are a bit different here. If we can keep the threadiverse nonprofit, and contribute to the maintenance costs of the servers, it might stay a much friendlier place than Reddit.

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 4 points 1 year ago

We should do an AmA with her!

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Here people actually react to what I post and write. And they react to the best possible interpretation of what I wrote, not the worst. And even if we disagree, we can still have a nice conversation.

Does anyone have a good theory about why the threadiverse is so much friendlier? Is it only because it's smaller? Is it because of the kind of people a new platform like this attracts? Because there is no karma? Maybe something else?

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

The best hacker is of course the one who can guess the password the fastest (all-lowercase, dictionary word).

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This describes 99% of AI startups.

The company I work for was considering using Mendable for AI-powered documentation search. I built a prototype using OpenAI embeddings and GPT-3.5 that was just as good as their product in a day. They didn’t buy Mendable :)

[-] sisyphean@programming.dev 1 points 1 year ago

Due for the iPhone is excellent. It's a reminder app that nags you every five minutes until you get The Thing™ done. Before I started using it, I had a problem with forgetting reminders once they appeared. This never happens anymore and I actually manage to get some things done!

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