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63 votes
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Can AI chatbots be used for geolocation?
4 votes -
Can we get an ~ai?
To me, AI is kind of its own thing. It's too creative to fall under ~tech, but it's not quite ~creative either. It's something brand new, and can't be stuffed into any of the already established...
To me, AI is kind of its own thing. It's too creative to fall under ~tech, but it's not quite ~creative either. It's something brand new, and can't be stuffed into any of the already established categories.
28 votes -
Meta introduces LLaMA 2, their next open source large language model, now free for commercial usage as well
44 votes -
Introducing TypeChat
19 votes -
Computer chip with built-in human brain tissue gets military funding
39 votes -
‘Not for machines to harvest’: Data revolts break out against AI
40 votes -
ChatGPT can be broken by entering these strange words, and nobody is sure why
56 votes -
Why transformative artificial intelligence is really, really hard to achieve
10 votes -
Apple tests ‘Apple GPT,’ develops generative AI tools to catch OpenAI
17 votes -
AI often mangles African languages. A network of thousands of coders and researchers is working to develop translation tools that understand their native languages
17 votes -
Researchers train and apply an LLM and an image generator to create bespoke South Park episodes
13 votes -
What have you made using an AI tool?
I'm curious what people have made with the assistance of any of the new AI tools. Let's skip low-effort things like asking ChatGPT to generate an essay and posting it as-is. But besides that, if...
I'm curious what people have made with the assistance of any of the new AI tools.
Let's skip low-effort things like asking ChatGPT to generate an essay and posting it as-is. But besides that, if you made something you think is cool, post it here.
45 votes -
How to use ChatGPT to ruin your legal career
28 votes -
The shady world of Brave selling copyrighted data for AI training
59 votes -
Why AI detectors think the US Constitution was written by AI
35 votes -
AI does not exist but it will ruin everything anyway
32 votes -
Any experience with making a board game?
My friend and I embarked upon a journey over the past few months to create a tabletop board game. The interesting part is that we were motivated by the emergence of generative AI and the...
My friend and I embarked upon a journey over the past few months to create a tabletop board game. The interesting part is that we were motivated by the emergence of generative AI and the capabilities it had in rapid prototyping concepts. On a whim we said, let's see how far we can push making a board game. We pushed Midjourney, ChatGPT, and a variety of creative tools to help build the foundation for our game. We both have design chops and are into diy, creative design, and 3d printing, and technology to help get this thing past the finish line.
We are now at the point were after many iterative sessions, we have a functional and fun to play game! Our intention is to give it away as a free downloadable that folks can 3d print and paper print all the parts so they can play too! Huzzah! We are balancing the rules and creating the instructions which is not something we are relying on AI aside sticking to the theme. We are in search of inspirato on what makes gameplay fun for folks today.
Question What are the most fun, exciting, or challenging aspects of any tabletop or board games you play? What keeps you engaged?
EDIT
I didn't give many specifics on the game itself, and figured it might help. Remember we used AI to come up with this storyline. The prompt was to write a story for a "Sci-fi Christmas Horror" board game...The basic premise is that you are attending a party at the North pole celebrating the research of Dr. Frost on ancient Christmas magic. Predictably things go bad, and you have to find your way out before it's too late and you are killed by a troop of Christmas themed monsters.
The games objective is to work together to escape the facility by collecting sleigh parts, fighting monsters, navigating a maze in dark hallways, and visiting special rooms to solve puzzles. It's all kinds of ridiculous but fun it its own way.
12 votes -
Scale AI co-founder says the FIRE movement inspired her to live ‘very cheaply’ on McDonald’s and free flights until she made $10 million
11 votes -
The workers at the frontlines of the AI revolution
12 votes -
Learn a foreign language before it’s too late
25 votes -
Inside the white-hot center of AI doomerism: Anthropic
8 votes -
If you wish to make an apple pie, you must first become dictator of the universe
11 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission opens investigation into OpenAI over technology’s potential harms
17 votes -
"Consciousness" as a conflationary alliance term
14 votes -
Portland radio station now has an AI DJ as a midday host
14 votes -
AI tools are designing entirely new proteins that could transform medicine
12 votes -
MF FOOM: AI-generated MF DOOM songs
7 votes -
Interview with computer science professor Shaolei Ren about the environmental impact of artificial intelligence
https://themarkup.org/hello-world/2023/07/08/ai-environmental-equity-its-not-easy-being-green A few months ago, I spoke with Shaolei Ren, as associate professor of computer science at University...
https://themarkup.org/hello-world/2023/07/08/ai-environmental-equity-its-not-easy-being-green
A few months ago, I spoke with Shaolei Ren, as associate professor of computer science at University of California, Riverside, and his team about their research into the secret water footprint of AI. Recently, Ren and his team studied how AI’s environmental costs are often disproportionately higher in some regions than others, so I spoke with him again to dig into those findings.
His team, which includes UC Riverside Ph.D. candidates Pengfei Li and Jianyi Yang, and Adam Wierman, a professor in the Department of Computing and Mathematical Sciences (CMS) at the California Institute of Technology, looked into a path toward more equitable AI through what they call “geographical load balancing.” Specifically, this approach attempts to “explicitly address AI’s environmental impacts on the most disadvantaged regions.”
Ren and I talked about why it’s not easy being green and what tangible steps cloud service providers and app developers could take to reduce their environmental footprint.
4 votes -
Two authors file a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging that ChatGPT unlawfully ‘ingested’ their books
36 votes -
Anger from voice actors as NSFW mods use AI deepfakes to replicate their voices
59 votes -
Lupe Fiasco - CHANNEL No3 (2023)
6 votes -
Introducing Superalignment
35 votes -
How we could stumble into AI catastrophe
12 votes -
GPT-4 API general availability and deprecation of older models in the Completions API
11 votes -
The actual danger from AI is mostly not what is getting talked about
46 votes -
Inflection AI develops supercomputer equipped with 22,000 NVIDIA H100 AI GPUs
7 votes -
A preview of Humane's AI Pin - TED Talk by Imran Chaudhri
12 votes -
America's first law regulating AI bias in hiring takes effect this week
13 votes -
Google updates its privacy policy to clarify it can use public data for training AI models
44 votes -
“We have built a giant treadmill that we can’t get off”: Sci-fi author Ted Chiang on how to best think about AI
25 votes -
Midjourney version 5.2 adds support for "zoom out" feature
30 votes -
The genius AI behind The Sims
8 votes -
A social network for AI
12 votes -
Boring Report: An app that aims to remove sensationalism from the news and make it boring to read, by utilizing the power of advanced AI language models
66 votes -
A monocle display with open-source hardware from Brilliant Labs
4 votes -
AI camera inspired by star-nosed mole snaps "photos" without taking photos
11 votes -
The AI art apocalypse
25 votes -
Numerically Stable RWKV Language Model
11 votes -
How Christopher Nolan learned to stop worrying and love AI
10 votes