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35 votes
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No, AI is not making engineers 10x as productive: curing your AI 10x engineer imposter syndrome
27 votes -
The great LLM scrape
24 votes -
We're launching Stargate Norway, OpenAI's first AI data center initiative in Europe under our OpenAI for Countries program
9 votes -
Persona vectors: monitoring and controlling character traits in language models
13 votes -
One quirky anti AI technique I've used is leaving in the typos
Ironically, AI has boomeranged from surpassing human intelligence to having us spot it like a dove in a pond. So now, leave in all the little flubs to make it a bit more clear that a person at...
Ironically, AI has boomeranged from surpassing human intelligence to having us spot it like a dove in a pond. So now, leave in all the little flubs to make it a bit more clear that a person at least typed this in a keyboard, you know?
42 votes -
They’re putting blue food coloring in everything
83 votes -
Dave Barry found out about his death the way everybody finds out everything: from Google
23 votes -
Subliminal learning: Language models transmit behavioral traits via hidden signals in data
21 votes -
'I destroyed months of your work in seconds' says AI coding tool after deleting a dev's entire database during a code freeze: 'I panicked instead of thinking'
74 votes -
OpenAI's gold medal performance on the International Math Olympiad
14 votes -
What is your opinion whenever you see news/opinion that tech companies are relying more on chatbots rather than junior developers/interns?
I see that in the headline from time to time. Not really sure how prevalent it is and it's pretty disappointing news. but I also can't help but think: the news articles are probably overblowing it...
I see that in the headline from time to time. Not really sure how prevalent it is and it's pretty disappointing news.
but I also can't help but think:
- the news articles are probably overblowing it and it's not probably not as prevalent as it's being portrayed
- that any tech company doing that is shooting themselves in the foot. in total, I was an intern at various companies for a little under 3 years. I don't doubt that the work I did for the majority of the my co-ops were all things that could have been done by a chatBot. writing unit tests and small scripts and etc. but they were invaluable to me (1) understanding what is expected of me in a professional environment and (2) gave me a basic idea of how to code in a professional environment (2) gave me alot of perspective on what technologies and tools I should spend spare time learning cause my university very much focused on dinosaur-era languages, for the classes that did teach any coding related skills. same for the friends I went to uni with. So all I think is maybe in the short term, they are saving money on not hiring interns/co-ops/junior devs to do work that can be done by a bot but I feel like in the long terms that will reduce the number of intermediate/senior devs on the market which means they'll be in higher demand and cost more money.
26 votes -
OpenAI to release web browser in challenge to Google Chrome
37 votes -
What are your AI-generated guilty pleasures?
Most people here dislike AI, more specifically LLM generated content, for reasons such as environmental impact, stealing people's work, etc. Despite that, is there anything that you enjoy? I've...
Most people here dislike AI, more specifically LLM generated content, for reasons such as environmental impact, stealing people's work, etc. Despite that, is there anything that you enjoy?
I've been listening to this artist's music for a while. It's mostly video game music "re-imagined by AI" into City Pop and other styles. Artist says they use AI to generate samples, then do the rest of the work like any producer would. I have no idea if it's true or not, but I gotta admit that most of it is really good.
Today I also watched some "AI ASMR" videos out of curiosity. It's stupid, I know. But watching a knife cut glass can be so damn satisfying. I'm sorry, planet.
45 votes -
Shouldn't somebody *stop* "Meta Superintelligence Labs"?
Noted smoked meats enthusiast Mark Zuckerberg has recently been running around collecting ML experts for a project involving an organization called Meta Superintelligence Labs, which is set to...
Noted smoked meats enthusiast Mark Zuckerberg has recently been running around collecting ML experts for a project involving an organization called Meta Superintelligence Labs, which is set to feature compute clusters with names like "Prometheus" and "Hyperion", and which will attempt to "deliver" superintelligence.
Isn't this sort of behavior on the list of things people are absolutely not to be allowed to do? Or has something changed and we now feel it's safe for Mark Zuckerberg to be allowed control of a piece of equipment that can outsmart all his enemies and also Mark Zuckerberg? Are we all safely convinced he will fail?
If it cannot be permitted, who is responsible for not permitting it?
26 votes -
OpenAI can rehabilitate AI models that develop a “bad boy persona”
14 votes -
Grok searches for Elon Musk's opinion on controversial questions
39 votes -
Paying for AI: Have you found it to be worth it?
I'm starting to use AI increasingly, and am getting some value out of it. I'm curious if paying for paid tiers of the big players (in particular, ChatGPT and Claude) provides significantly better...
I'm starting to use AI increasingly, and am getting some value out of it. I'm curious if paying for paid tiers of the big players (in particular, ChatGPT and Claude) provides significantly better responses.
I'm aware that the paid tiers offer more features and benefits than just higher response quality. For me, those are just nice-to-haves, and not my primary concern.
My main uses of AI are software development and foreign language learning. So far, I've used the free versions of ChatGPT and Claude, as well as "proxies," including Github Copilot and Duck.ai. For both my use cases, I've found the responses usually good and helpful. I just maintain a healthy skepticism about the correctness of the answers, and challenge, test, and double check where needed (especially testing suggested code when developing software).
Have you found response quality to be noticeably and significantly better with paid tiers? I was just randomly thinking, and it occurred to me that the cost of an AI subscription is in the same ballpark as a subscription to a language learning service like Duolingo. So, if I can get value from AI that approaches what I'd get from a dedicated language learning service (even if it doesn't quite match or exceed it), then also getting the value of general AI in the same subscription should make things quite valuable and worth it. Not to mention possibly getting better software development assistance in the same package.
32 votes -
The future of forums is lies, I guess
63 votes -
AI videos have never been better: can you tell what's real?
31 votes -
Interview with Google's Android leader Sameer Samat
6 votes -
AI coding tools make developers slower but they think they're faster, study finds
40 votes -
The rise of Whatever
92 votes -
That white guy who can't get a job at Tim Hortons? He's AI.
22 votes -
Pay up or stop scraping: Cloudflare program charges bots for each crawl
46 votes -
Decrypted Apple Intelligence safety filters
18 votes -
Sam Altman says Meta offered OpenAI staff $100 million bonuses, as Mark Zuckerberg ramps up AI poaching efforts
37 votes -
China hosts first fully autonomous AI robot football (soccer) match
7 votes -
Cats confuse reasoning LLM: Query-agnostic adversarial triggers for reasoning models
24 votes -
You're going to use Gemini on Android whether you like it or not
48 votes -
TikTok is being flooded with racist AI videos generated by Google’s Veo 3
35 votes -
Content Independence Day: No AI crawl without compensation!
14 votes -
An industry group representing almost all of Denmark's media outlets including broadcasters and newspapers has said it's suing ChatGPT's parent company OpenAI for using its content
13 votes -
Your brain on ChatGPT: Accumulation of cognitive debt when using an AI assistant for essay writing task
54 votes -
Meta poaches three OpenAI researchers: Lucas Beyer, Alexander Kolesnikov and Xiaohua Zhai
13 votes -
US Federal judge sides with Meta in lawsuit over training AI models on copyrighted books
22 votes -
Echo Chamber: A context-poisoning jailbreak that bypasses LLM guardrails
34 votes -
AI is transforming Indian call centers
26 votes -
Anthropic wins key US ruling on AI training in authors' copyright lawsuit
27 votes -
The AI lifestyle subsidy is going to end
54 votes -
FilMaster: Bridging cinematic principles and generative AI for automated film generation
3 votes -
OpenAI is nabbing Microsoft customers, fueling partners’ rivalry
9 votes -
Curated realities: An AI film festival and the future of human expression
3 votes -
OpenAI slams US court order to save all ChatGPT logs, including deleted chats
45 votes -
Contra Ptacek's terrible article on AI
27 votes -
Disney files landmark case against AI image generator
16 votes -
Disney and Universal vs. Midjourney: A landmark copyright fight over genAI
25 votes -
The Common Pile v0.1: An 8TB dataset of public domain and openly licensed text
26 votes -
Six-month-old, solo-owned vibe coder Base44 sells to Wix for $80M cash
13 votes -
Is the AI bubble about to burst?
35 votes