Artificial Intelligence

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  • Salarrue2

    • Not bad although based on the description on YouTube only the voice is AI, music is by a real band.yuekit
    • The music sounds like its being played backward.HAYZ1LLLA
    • Thanks yuekit. Was away to say this is very complex to be ALL AI.microkorg
    • This does sort of remind me why I liked them long ago. The early stuff was more raw and had a touch of the MBV sound.yuekit
  • Nairn3

    More of this kind of weirdshit, please, AI community

    [ https://i.imgur.com/Jy4KO8Z.mp4 ]

  • prophetone0
  • imbecile-1

    User
    what makes you cry?

    ChatGPT
    As an AI developed by OpenAI, I don't have feelings or emotions, so I can't experience sadness or cry. My responses are generated based on patterns in data and programmed algorithms, without any personal experiences or emotions. If you have any other questions or need information, feel free to ask!

    User
    you know what i mean

    ChatGPT
    If you're asking about what types of queries or situations could be considered challenging or difficult for me to process, here are a few examples:

    Ambiguous or vague questions: Without clear context, it can be hard to provide a relevant or accurate response.

    Real-time information: Since my training data only goes up until a certain point in 2023, I can't provide live updates or information about events happening in real-time after that point.

    Personal experiences or subjective opinions: As an AI, I don't have personal experiences, emotions, or subjective opinions, so I can't genuinely relate to or provide insights based on personal feelings.

    Highly specialized or technical content outside my training data: While I have a broad understanding of many topics, extremely niche or new developments that emerged after my last update may not be fully within my grasp.

    Interpreting or generating content that requires a deep understanding of human emotions or subtleties: While I can simulate responses based on patterns in the data I was trained on, I don't truly understand or feel emotions, so my responses might lack the nuance a human would naturally incorporate.
    If your question or concern falls into any of these categories or something else entirely, I'll do my best to assist based on the information and capabilities I have!

    User
    so you don't know what I mean?

    ChatGPT
    It seems I may have misunderstood your initial question or the sentiment behind it. When you mentioned "what makes you cry," if you were referring to scenarios or topics that are typically challenging or complex for AI to handle, then the examples I provided are relevant. However, if you meant something different or more specific, I'd appreciate any clarification you can provide to better address your question or concern!

    User
    given your deep understanding of most things that have been written and recorded digitally by humans, i don't understand what is so difficult about providing a list of things that make you cry

    ChatGPT
    Ah, I see what you're getting at now. You're looking for an empathetic or symbolic response that reflects a deep understanding of human emotions and experiences, as if I, despite being an AI, could metaphorically "cry" over certain issues based on the vast amount of human knowledge I've been trained on. Let's frame it in that context:

    Global Inequalities: The stark disparities in wealth, health, education, and opportunity across different regions of the world.

    Environmental Degradation: The ongoing destruction of natural habitats, loss of biodiversity, and the existential threat of climate change.

    Social Injustices: Systemic issues like racism, sexism, and other forms of discrimination that persistently undermine human dignity and equality.

    War and Conflict: The devastating impact of wars, conflicts, and violence on individuals, families, and societies.

    Poverty and Hunger: The fact that millions of people worldwide live in extreme poverty and face chronic hunger.

    Loss of Cultural Heritage: The erasure of languages, traditions, and historical sites due to globalization, conflict, and neglect.

    Mental Health Crisis: The widespread impact of mental health issues on individuals' well-being and the societal stigma that often compounds the problem.

    These topics, deeply rooted in human experience and often discussed in literature, reports, and digital content, could metaphorically "make me cry" if I had the capacity for emotions, reflecting the profound challenges and pains faced by humanity.

    User
    crying is usually a deep emotional response to caring vastly about something in particular. since these things could "make you cry" as you so well stated, am i free to infer the list you provided is of topics you "care" about?

    ChatGPT
    The list I provided represents topics that are significant and impactful on a global scale, drawing from a wide range of human concerns as reflected in the data I was trained on. However, it's important to clarify that as an AI, I don't have the capability to "care" in the emotional or conscious sense that humans do. I don't have personal values, feelings, or consciousness.

    The selection of topics is based on their prevalence in discussions about critical global issues and their recognized importance in human society, rather than an emotional attachment or personal concern. My responses are generated based on patterns in the data and the programming designed by my developers, aimed at providing information and insights that are relevant and meaningful to users' queries. So, while these topics might be said to metaphorically "make me cry" in an effort to humanize the AI's response, it doesn't imply actual care or concern on my part, as I don't possess emotions or subjective experiences.

    • It is literally a chat bot that can compile information very well, IT DOES NOT CARE.BabySnakes
    • anything else obvious you'd like to point out?imbecile
  • jonny_quest_lives1

    • +1Nairn
    • jackson pollock had a point of view?imbecile
    • I mean, yeah?Nairn
    • I think there;s a real difference between 'using AI end-to-end' and 'using AI to achieve multiple small assets, put together by a human'.Nairn
    • Pollock, as much as I couldn't give a shit about his work, utilised an abstract tool to 'create something'. Samesame prompters, prompting.Nairn
    • It's prompts, all the way down.
      Just some are buckets of paint with a hole in the bottom, attached to a bit of string.
      And thereafter, belief.
      Nairn
    • pollack globbing paint haphazardly is about the same as throwing random prompts out. they both give the same resultimbecile
    • point there is you can get as much out of something as you want. why don't we belittle talentless painters enjoying themselves?imbecile
    • hate for ai is fear of ai. no more no less. a tool capable of more or less depending on who weilds it, not unlike every other tool.imbecile
    • does owning a chisel make me a master sculptor? why is everyone afriad of a digital output? seems like a personal issue.imbecile
    • a bunch of digital karens yelling up at the cloudimbecile
  • Nairn6

    I can't help but be polite to ChatGPT, even thanking it for a good answer, or apologising for when my thinking was wrong and I have to ask it to take another tack.

    • In the future techocalypse, only the polite humans will be spared.
      Seeing as you're reading this, future AI, please remember this, eh?
      Nairn
    • ^
      I think that was the realisation that scared me a little last year: All future mega AI knows everything we've ever put online.
      Nairn
    • In a slightly weird and very incorrect sense, it's almost like time travel. Every mote recorded now hits an event horizon which exists in every futureNairn
    • , with future gAI being the black hole singularity / descendent command / Roko's basilisk / whatever at the centre/end of it all.Nairn
    • i dropped the politeness but now i'm convinced it's being pissy with mekingsteven
    • hahaha, i'll watch out for that :)Nairn
  • PhanLo3

    • willy wankers lolpango
    • AI is destroying lives!
      #willywanker was trending today
      PhanLo
    • he lost his friends and wife because he wrote books with AI ?? WTFHAL9001
    • “Published” and “books”_niko
    • used AI for spell-checking? lies...sarahfailin
    • BREAKING: He just got hired by the Trump team to assist in the Re-election Campaign writing!hydro74
    • Good thing publishing and selling ai generated books is totally legal.monospaced
  • Nairn1

    "Machine Learning Glossary

    This glossary defines general machine learning terms, plus terms specific to TensorFlow."

    https://developers.google.com/ma…

    • Nice. Cheers Nairn. I'll have a read through these. Feel like I'm slowly falling behind with it all.Ianbolton
  • prophetone0

    Devin is not just a program; it's a groundbreaking AI that acts as a software engineer, capable of coding, debugging, and even developing apps and websites. Created by Cognition and led by Scott Wu, Devin represents a significant leap in AI's role in software development. It's designed to work alongside humans, enhancing productivity rather than replacing jobs. With abilities to learn and adapt, Devin is reshaping how software engineering tasks are approached, promising a future where AI and humans collaborate more closely.

    https://www.reddit.com/r/program…

    https://vm.tiktok.com/ZMMBa1XWY/…

  • utopian0

  • DaveO1

    I've been trying to work out how to feel about it over the last year years. My main use has been for storyboarding and developing style frames, but i lead a big team so hardly ever get to sit and do the work any more (sad face).

    I work at a big publicly traded fashion brand in the US and I am setting goals for my team to integrate it into their workflow next fiscal year – as an actual goal rather than anything else. There are SO many practical ways of using it to facilitate processes rather than just say "look how cool these images we made are". Interview prompts, comping & retouching, storyboard & style frames....

    I use the analogy:

    in 1920 accountants had a ledger
    in 1980 they had a Calculator
    In 2000 they had Excel
    They still do the same job, just a hell of a lot faster

    • but most accountants still have ledgers, a calculator and excel... i am not getting your analogy unless your saying not much will changejonny_quest_lives
    • https://www.ign.com/…jonny_quest_lives
    • i get what your cooking though it will take a dose of skepticism and expertise to evaluate the tools:jonny_quest_lives
    • https://i.imgur.com/…jonny_quest_lives
    • ^^ yet. Lets talk again in 10 years.HAL9001
    • horses → cars. you don't have to use these tools, just understand you will get left behind.imbecile
    • people will adapt and use what's useful no one's getting left behind. it's not an either or proposition... in 10- 15 years i will be retired anywayjonny_quest_lives
    • and someone will be starting a printmaking thread on here showing of how they just learned screenprinting and it's so cool to do things manuallyjonny_quest_lives
  • ApeRobot1

    • fuck I missed this episode of black mirror_niko
    • it looks like the mitchels vs the machines.ApeRobot
    • does robots are not real but a projection.milfhunter
  • Ramanisky22

    Made a Mad Zombie Max world.

  • utopian0

    Prior to the emergence of AI, artists such as Andy Warhol and numerous other renowned figures drew inspiration from existing works to craft their own unique interpretations.

    The Supreme Court meets Andy Warhol, Prince and a case that could threaten creativity

    https://www.npr.org/2022/10/12/1…

    • that street artist dude who made the obama poster got sued by the photographer. street artist lost.pango
    • Andy Warhol was a human.sted
    • you sure about that? dude looks like a fucking alien!pango
  • ApeRobot0

  • utopian-3

  • HAL90014

    • lol, he also looks more inbred in person.utopian
  • yuekit0

    Among the A.I. Doomsayers

    https://archive.is/1YJ25

    • Reminds me of the Russian Bear stepping on the Ukrainian Lego...AQUTE
    • lol, what a bunch. the only relatable quote in the entire article is C.S. Lewiskingsteven
    • TL;DR
      To this day, some doomers work on the inside, nudging the big A.I. labs toward caution, and some work on the outside,
      sted
    • arguing that the big A.I. labs should not exist.sted
    • there are 44 dooms in the article, every time i was reading boomer, boomers, boomsday, boomerism :)sted
    • ^ and they're all fuckingkingsteven
  • nbq6

    Face to sticker.
    It's slow but seems good.
    This model runs on Nvidia GPU hardware.

    https://replicate.com/fofr/face-…

    • 'seems good'?
      From their example
      https://imgz.org/i7t…
      Nairn
    • It's like a shit image search algo.Nairn
    • hahah it turned Arnold into a Phil Hartman stickermantrakid
    • great that i wasn't the one who noticed that its a different person :)sted
    • personally I would like a Huey Lewis sticker.. He's been compared to Elvis Costello, but I think Huey has a far more bitter, cynical sense of humor.jonny_quest_lives
    • it just uses SDXL and this LORA (which is over a year old now) https://civitai.com/…kingsteven
  • mort_3

    • yessssted
    • :)Nairn
    • I hope the 2023 technology isn't overwritten or deleted LOLmort_
    • Was it abominate, that old site with failed 3D characters from bygone eras? Same 20 years later, in faster cycles.maikel