Yeah, no. This comment alone would go against any government NDA - and this user is just some random person who, going by their comment history, most certainly has no inside knowledge of anything.
Yeah, no. This comment alone would go against any government NDA - and this user is just some random person who, going by their comment history, most certainly has no inside knowledge of anything.
I sometimes wonder what needs to happen to people in order for them to confidently write nonsense like this.
I sometimes wonder what needs to happen to people in order for them to confidently write nonsense like this.
It seems like the entire industry is in pure panic about AI, not just Google. Everyone hopes that LLMs will end years of homeopathic growth through iteration of long-existing technology, which is why it attracts tons of venture capital.
Google, which sits where IBM was decades ago, is too big, too corporate and too slow now, so they needed years to react to this fad. When they finally did, all they were able to come up with was a rushed equivalent of existing LLMs that suffers from all of the same problems.
I agree. The only application that is fine for this in my opinion is using it solely for entertainment, as a toy.
The problem is of course that everyone and their mothers are pouring billions into what clearly should only be used as a toy, expecting it to perform miracles it currently can not and might never be able to pull off.
Its not chatgpt that’s just default config u can use the API endpoint to point to any chatgpt api compatible llm.
Since the issue with hallucinations is shared by all LLMs, not just ChatGPT, this doesn’t change anything.
Are you seriously trying to push your ChatGPT “tool” in response to an article about language models like this one having substantial issues? “Not guaranteed” - yes, obviously, that’s the point of the article - and from a quick look at your code, I don’t see how this nonsense addresses any of that.
But what about…
Imagine the Papal States never dissolving and becoming a nuclear-armed power in the 20th century, using the threat of nuclear annihilation to maintain their independence and increase their global influence.
That would be an interesting alternative history scenario.
He didn’t have the resources and determination of the Chinese state behind him.
Both reported numbers that were nowhere close to what Qualcomm promised. How not close? Above 50% this time but one used the term “Celeron” to describe performance.
There is no harsher way to describe the performance of a CPU. Ouch.
Startpage is pretty good.
Guess what my opinion on QR codes is.
I didn’t downvote you, I just have a healthy distrust of link shorteners. There is absolutely zero reason for using them around here.
What’s with that short link?
Very interesting. Lots of news websites are operating on a very similar principle, with the user having to either accept all cookies or pay for an expensive subscription that allows them to opt out of tracking cookies. I’ve always thought that this couldn’t possibly be legal.
So far, everything humans have created is only as smart as their creators and, well, we all know who is running Tesla.
If you think you are impervious to this, then I got news for you.
The problem in both cases is that people remember these artistic depiction as real, even if there’s a disclosure.
The above comment is an example of this getting waved away.