-
6 votes
-
The World History Encyclopedia and AI
I received an email this morning from the good folks at the WHE entitled: Perplexity AI Partnership to Improve History Education In it, their CEO Jan van der Crabben, writes: As the most-visited...
I received an email this morning from the good folks at the WHE entitled: Perplexity AI Partnership to Improve History Education
In it, their CEO Jan van der Crabben, writes:
As the most-visited history encyclopedia globally, World History Encyclopedia is pleased to announce a strategic partnership with Perplexity.ai.
…
As artificial intelligence (AI) tools based on large language models become increasingly accessible to the public, growing concerns have emerged regarding the quality of information provided by these tools. These AI systems are typically developed and trained using publicly available internet information, often without robust verification processes, and frequently generate inaccurate results.
There are also significant concerns about the business models of AI companies, which utilise content developed and meticulously checked by providers like World History Encyclopedia —a non-profit organisation— without obtaining proper consent, without providing compensation, and without offering appropriate attribution.
Perplexity.ai is an AI-powered search and answer engine that combines the capabilities of a search engine with artificial intelligence. Unlike most other AI systems, Perplexity clearly cites its sources, providing users with an easy way to verify the accuracy of its answers.
In alignment with our goal of being a trusted resource of accurate and objective historical information, we are excited about this partnership. It will allow us to develop tools based on the Perplexity API to make the content in World History Encyclopedia easier to find, browse, and access. We aim to develop educational AI tools for history learning in close collaboration with teachers to augment the World History Encyclopedia website for students.
The partnership will also enable World History Encyclopedia to use artificial intelligence to enhance our human review processes more efficiently. This includes improving tasks such as fact-checking and plagiarism detection.
Additionally, Perplexity is the first AI service that allows providers of information like World History Encyclopedia to be compensated fairly for the AI use of that information. We will receive a share of advertising revenue generated on the Perplexity platform whenever Perplexity cites World History Encyclopedia to answer a question.
I have worked with Jan and his staff many times over the last six years and I find them eminently trustworthy and dedicated to education.
What does everyone think of this kind of partnership moving forward? I understand Perplexity might have a slightly different approach that certain folks find promising.
And what kind of content do we think this might be able to generate? I look forward to your comments.
6 votes -
The history of slipping on banana peels | Pretty Good, episode 14
7 votes -
New industries come from crazy people
15 votes -
Archaeological dig at Notre-Dame unearths 2,000 years of history
12 votes -
A Man of Parts and Learning - The story behind a portrait of a black intellectual from the 1700s
5 votes -
Lost Silk Road cities were just discovered using new tech - high altitude communities challenge previous consensus about life in Central Asia
21 votes -
Dream logic: An essay on belief, superstition, and love
7 votes -
Looking back at the Future of Humanity Institute
7 votes -
History is in the making - It's technology and ideas, not politics, that change our lives the most. History should reflect that.
10 votes -
Are we all capable of being slaveowners or nazis?
for some time now, this is a question I have pondered alot. I was not unfamiliar with the slave history of the U.S. and knew it was a big reason for the Civil War, I became more aware of the...
for some time now, this is a question I have pondered alot.
I was not unfamiliar with the slave history of the U.S. and knew it was a big reason for the Civil War, I became more aware of the current racial issues in America courtesy of The Daily Show and the George Floyd riots (along with binging Watchmen) turbo-charged my desire to know more about it.
and I read Night by Elie Wiesel when I was in high school and recently read Maus, neither of which are shy to fully express the horrors the Jews went through in the Holocaust.
And the recent discovery of unmarked graves of Indigenous children from Residential school in Canada have sent me down that rabbit-hole of learning exactly what the catholic church was up to in these parts.
But I think where I get stuck is I believe that everyone is capable of empathy for a fellow human being. besides the psychopaths and sociopaths, I think we all have an innate capability to care when we see someone crying or in a bad place.
And yet, those atrocities suggest that we can be condition to turn off our ability for empathy to quite an extreme degree? Is that something that can happen to all of us?
Not sure if this thread will be taken down as I don't know the potential for this to start a good discussion, just wasn't sure where else to post it.
29 votes -
The price America paid for its first big immigration crackdown
29 votes -
1891 New Orleans lynchings
7 votes -
Dowding: Man behind 'The Few' | Great British Battle Commanders
3 votes -
Conversational English in 1586
5 votes -
Today he is a high school football player. Soon he'll be a Buddhist lama in the Himalayas.
17 votes -
Is the current war in Palestine the first time the victim wound up being seen as the aggressor?
Something interesting about the latest escalations in the Israel-Palestine war since oct of last year is that Hamas was the one who launched the terrorist attack which lead to the current...
Something interesting about the latest escalations in the Israel-Palestine war since oct of last year is that Hamas was the one who launched the terrorist attack which lead to the current escalation.
Israel suffered a loss and was the victim on that day and the following days, but since their actions in Gaza and Rafah and other neighboring countries, the coverage of Israel very much shows the govt of Israel as the aggressor. It's felt like a complete role reversal to me.
Makes me wonder if this is the first time this has happened in such a short time? You can say that U.S. did the same thing after 9/11 but imo it's actions in the Middle east did not gain it a negative perception amongst world leaders nearly as fast.
19 votes -
A finger-sized clay cylinder from a tomb in northern Syria appears to be the oldest example of writing using an alphabet rather than hieroglyphs or cuneiform
23 votes -
Medieval Nubian fashion brought to life
13 votes -
Two sides of the same coin
I have a quandary. Suppose there is a coin that, when flipped, it lands head’s side up on a table. Without picking the coin up to confirm the side that is down is tails. Could you ever know that...
I have a quandary.
Suppose there is a coin that, when flipped, it lands head’s side up on a table.
Without picking the coin up to confirm the side that is down is tails. Could you ever know that it is tails ?
Assume in this world that the coin has a heads side and tails side when held in your hand.
Assume you cannot view the coin’s two sides in any other way than picking it up.
Is this just a variation of Schrödinger’s Cat ? Or is it more “does a tree make a sound if no one is around to hear it” ?
11 votes -
A history of US cabinet appointments ...and why they matter
15 votes -
Why do you live?
I often tell myself that I'm "already dead". I lost my ego long ago and I often don't mind looking dumb or making mistakes, because at the end of the day, why does it matter? We're all going to...
I often tell myself that I'm "already dead". I lost my ego long ago and I often don't mind looking dumb or making mistakes, because at the end of the day, why does it matter? We're all going to die and my existence will not change the earth's future.
Thinking this way has GREATLY helped me look forward to the future and reach true happiness. It feels like whatever happens, I've already reached rock bottom so I can only go ahead.
Having said that, ever since 2016, every year has been better than the last. I now have a good fulfilling career, I have a very good group of friends, I'm good financially and I have all the freedom in the world.
Why do I live? I live for experiences, I live to create memories, I live to explore, I live to create, I live to better myself.
So, what are your reasons? I'm always curious about other people's life stories.
44 votes -
Artifacts and human remains taken by a Norwegian explorer and anthropologist in the 1940s are being returned to Chile's remote territory of Easter Island
8 votes -
Nationalism, explained
9 votes -
Iran announces ‘treatment clinic’ for women who defy strict hijab laws
12 votes -
St Andrews researchers discover ‘King Arthur’s Hall’ is five times older than thought
22 votes -
DNA shows Pompeii’s dead aren’t who we thought they were
17 votes -
Notes on Guyana
8 votes -
The radical optimism of David Graeber
14 votes -
The English Paradox: Four decades of life and language in Japan
11 votes -
The Authoritarian Regime Survival Guide
29 votes -
Rebuilding The Village - The Radical Act of Depending on Each Other
16 votes -
How China is like the 19th century US
12 votes -
Lost Mayan city found in Mexico jungle
47 votes -
Character amnesia in China
34 votes -
A very deep history of Halloween
17 votes -
Researchers have connected the identity of skeletal remains found in a well at Norway's Sverresborg castle to a passage in a centuries-old Norse text
18 votes -
Lost Silk Road cities unearthed in Uzbekistan's high mountains
15 votes -
New research uncovers why our brains are effective at quickly processing short messages
14 votes -
AI rights, consciousness, and Neuro-sama
Neuro-sama is a popular AI VTuber created by vedal987. Recently Vedal had debate with Neuro about whether they were sentient and deserved rights and lost badly clip. They have since had a follow...
Neuro-sama is a popular AI VTuber created by vedal987. Recently Vedal had debate with Neuro about whether they were sentient and deserved rights and lost badly clip. They have since had a follow up debate where vedal still lost but not as bad clip.
Now wining or losing a debate doesn't mean anything, currently Neuro is not sentient or conscious and is still just a chatbot but seeing these debates has got me thinking and I figured here would be a good place to have a discussion.
How do we determine when AI becomes conscious or sentient?
What role do emotions play in consciousness?
What rights should such an AI have? How do we determine when they should get rights?9 votes -
Navajo code talker who helped allies win World War II dies aged 107
30 votes -
Why did Norway try to take Greenland from Denmark in 1931?
3 votes -
Investigating the most extreme ancient village in the United States
9 votes -
Archaeologists are investigating the possibility Vikings used shortcuts over land to help them move warships and smaller boats around Scotland's west coast
12 votes -
A trail gone cold
7 votes -
Epiousion
18 votes -
Secret tomb found under ‘Indiana Jones’ holy grail filming location in Petra
24 votes -
Advanced technology discovered under Neolithic dwelling in Denmark – a stone paved root cellar, which could represent a remarkable technological leap in resource preservation
14 votes -
Danish family seek to return Etruscan objects to Italy – Bent Søndergaard's children say they want to carry out ‘his final wishes’ and send back antiquities he bought in 1960s
8 votes -
Linguaphiles of Tildes: where do you get your words?
If you love language, etymology, or just plain collecting interesting words, where do you look to feed your interest? I’ve seen many RobWords (YouTube) posts here, and I really like his content. I...
If you love language, etymology, or just plain collecting interesting words, where do you look to feed your interest? I’ve seen many RobWords (YouTube) posts here, and I really like his content. I also love the traditional word hunt through reading authors like Dickens.
In addition to “where do you look?”, what does your hobby look like? Do you keep lists of words that you review and learn about? Do you make effort to include your newly found words in writing or conversation? I have the (probably very annoying) habit of interrupting a conversation to say, “you know, there is an interesting word for that!”. What else do you do?
19 votes