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[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 0 points 6 days ago

You live in a fantasy world if you think it's possible to catch 100% of mistakes internally.

Nice strawman. No one said anything about catching 100% of mistakes internally. But outsourcing that work to unpaid volunteers with zero verification of qualifications is the definition of "passing the buck".

The correct answer is to hire and train up a QA team.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

Not many.

Yes, literally every single person on this planet can recite a song or poem.

But there are naturally massive differences between a human brain and an LLM. The point I was making is that an LLM doesn't copy and store books and articles wholesale. The ability to reproduce samples from the dataset is more of a quirk than a feature, in the same way that a person can memorize things.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

I don’t get why people who don’t like their content bother hating them.

Because for good or bad, they have a significant influence in the tech world. And since they are more bad, people don't like them.

Take the Linux challenge, for example. They massively misrepresented the usability of Linux for the average person and for gamers. They even concluded at the end of their challenge that Linux was unsuitable for most gamers. And the release and success of the Steam Deck shortly afterwards was quite delicious.

Then there was the bit where Linus didn't read the warning about the package manager removing the desktop environment and just hit yes, then complained that it wasn't his fault and that the system was poorly designed.

The guy literally has an issue with accountability.

You’re upset they aren’t more knowledgeable as if everyone making tech content needs to know everything.

A better statement is that I'm upset because they preach their deep and unchallengeable knowledge and act as a be-all end-all authority in tech.

But really I'm not "upset" by them. I just really dislike them and think they're insufferable.

And I don't watch LTT. And there are plenty of other, and objectively better, channels about tech. And I watch those better channels, including GamersNexus.

All I’ll say is I’m willing to wait and see if they improve or if they make similar mistakes.

Their entire channel is a giant mistake. All of their content is garbage by virtue of their proven flawed and subpar provides. A process they admitted was flawed, and from what I've seen is still flawed with the garbage corrections in the comments nonsense they promised to fix.

They're just going to go about business as usual and just be a little more careful with their public image. They don't deserve the views they get.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 0 points 1 week ago

Fine, you win, I misunderstood.

It's not a competition, but I genuinely respect you for saying you misunderstood.

Once an LLM is trained, it is static and unchanging until you re-train it with new data and update the model.

Absolutely! I honestly think this is the main thing (or at least one of the main things) that prevent human-level intelligence or even sentience in LLM's.

Think about how our minds work. From the moment we're born (really, it's way before that) our brains are bombarded with input and feedback from every sense. It takes a person many months of that to start recognizing things. That's also why babies sleep so much, their brains are kinda "training" and growing fast. Organizing all the data into memories.

Side bar: this is actually what dreams are. Dreams are emotions, thoughts, ideas, or whatever concept a neuron or group of neurons are associated with getting triggered. When we dream it's our brain taking the days inputs and building new connections. The neural connections in our brains are very much like weights and feed-forward process of neural activation is near identical to how artificial neural networks function. They aren't called "artificial neural networks" for no reason.

Here's a useful graphic that shows things that make up "intelligence"

A very basic definition of intelligence is "the ability to solve problems or make decisions".

I think the term is just often misused in common parlance so often that people start applying in a scientific setting incorrectly. Kinda how people used to call an entire computer the CPU, which like the word intelligence everyone understands what's being said, but it's factually wrong.

Same thing today when people say "I bought a new GPU" when they should say "I bought a new video card" as the GPU is just a component.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

I don’t understand why LTT gets so much crap from people

Because their clowns. Literally. Their content is pure tech entertainment with constant immature humour and little substance. The way they present themselves is like a group of teenagers messing around.

Then there's their "expertise". They don't know tech beyond a Windows "power user".

But in regards to the more recent scandal, I really think a lot of those things are fixable and I’ll be watching to see if they fix them.

Linus showed his true colours during the Billet Labs incident. He doubled down hard, and I'm convinced that even today Linus feels like he did nothing wrong. They have zero reputation to salvage, IMO.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

No, don't give those clowns more money.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

but I do enjoy LTT's content overall.

I used to as well, up until the storage server video and their Linux challenge.

I lost every shred of respect and interest after Linus showed his true colours during the Billet Labs nonsense.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world -1 points 1 week ago

Cause we got a good glimpse into the kind of person Linus was when that whole thing started, by selling the prototype that wasnt his, then going out and lying about being in contact with the company, who he lied about forgiving him and making a deal to make up for it...

10'000%

This is what all his rabidly loyal fans miss. He showed true colours during this incident.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world -1 points 1 week ago

Doubled down?

Yes, doubled down. After being called out Linus made two separate long posts about why he wasn't wrong.

They also formed a volunteer team of "beta tester" viewers who see each video pre-release

So using free labour instead of just doing their jobs? If they can't "catch any mistakes internally", then they're just bad at their jobs (which they are).

I think they handled it well.

Yes, the PR team they used gave them a good corporate playbook to work with.

"Slowed the upload cadence" is just another way to say "wait for this to blow over".

I used to watch LTT, mostly because it was interesting from the "let's see what those guys have to say". I had zero interest in their technical expertise because, well, they don't really have any. They've always been clowns, but after their storage server video and their Linux "challenge" I lost all respect for any talent or knowledge they claimed to have. After the Billet Labs incident I lost any shred of respect I had for them.

They are clowns.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 3 points 1 week ago

If you put a gazillion monkeys on a typewriter they can write Shakespeare.

This is a mathematical curiosity borne out of pure randomness. An LLM trained on a dataset to generate similar content is quite the opposite of randomness.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

Get a load of this maroon, they think LLMs are actually sapient!

I guess reading comprehension is as bad here as it's ever been on the internet.

[-] CeeBee_Eh@lemmy.world 1 points 1 week ago

I’m pretty sure LLMs have exactly reproduced copyrighted passages.

If I asked you to recite a popular poem, nursery rhyme, a song, or book passage there's a good chance you could. Everyone can recite things word for word.

It's the same with LLM's, if they're asked to generate, for example, an article written by the New York Post about a specific topic they really did write about, then it's similar to asking someone to recite a poem or song.

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CeeBee_Eh

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