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13 votes
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Let's talk Local LLMs - So many questions
Hello there (oh god, I am opening my first thread here - so exciting) I'd love to ask the people here about local LLMs. To be honest, I got interested in this topic, but am leaving reddit, where a...
Hello there
(oh god, I am opening my first thread here - so exciting)I'd love to ask the people here about local LLMs.
To be honest, I got interested in this topic, but am leaving reddit, where a sub r/locallama exists.
I don't want to interact with that site anymore, so I am taking this here.My questions, to start us off:
- Models are available on huggingface (among other places), but where do I get the underlying software? I read "oogabooga" somewhere, but honestly, I am lost.
- If I only want to USE a local model, what are the requirements, and how do I judge if I can use something from the values of "4bit / 8 bit" and "30B, 7B"??
- If I get crazy and want to TRAIN a LorA ... what then?
- Good resources / wiki pages, tutorials, etc?
21 votes -
Megathread #11 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
It's been six months since ChatGPT launched and about three months since I started posting these. I think it's getting harder to find new things to post about about AI, but here's another one...
It's been six months since ChatGPT launched and about three months since I started posting these. I think it's getting harder to find new things to post about about AI, but here's another one anyway.
Here's the previous thread.
27 votes -
ChatGPT is cutting non-English languages out of the AI revolution
16 votes -
Artificial Intelligence Sweden is leading an initiative to build a large language model not only for Swedish, but for all the major languages in the Nordic region
6 votes -
What's your p(doom)?
Now that ChatGPT's been around for long enough to become a quotidian fixture, I think most of us have realized that we're closer than expected to generalized artificial intelligence (or at least a...
Now that ChatGPT's been around for long enough to become a quotidian fixture, I think most of us have realized that we're closer than expected to generalized artificial intelligence (or at least a reasonable facsimile of it), even when comparing to just a couple years ago.
OG AI doomers like Eliezer Yudkowsky seem a little less nutty nowadays. Even for those of us who still doubt the inevitably of the AI apocalypse, the idea has at least become conceivable.
In fact, the concept of an AI apocalypse has become mainstream enough to gain a cute moniker: p(doom), i.e. the (prior) probability that AI will inflict an existential crisis on humanity.
So for funsies, I ask my dear tilderinos: what is your p(doom)? How do you define an "existential crisis" (e.g., 90%+ population lost)? Why did you chose your prior? How would you change public policy to address your p(doom)?
14 votes -
Denmark's prime minister Mette Frederiksen wrote part of a speech using OpenAI's chatbot ChatGPT to highlight the risks of artificial intelligence
3 votes -
The AI moment of truth for Chinese censorship
6 votes -
Another update to Kagi plans - More searches and unlimited AI interactions for subscribers
13 votes -
ROT13 + base64 on GPT4 = reliable hallucinations
I just wanted to share somewhere some of the experimentation I've been doing lately. I'm still playing with this a lot, so this is entirely just a conversation starter. I took a paragraph of lorem...
I just wanted to share somewhere some of the experimentation I've been doing lately. I'm still playing with this a lot, so this is entirely just a conversation starter.
I took a paragraph of lorem ipsum, applied ROT13 to it, and then base64'd the results. The results are extremely reliably triggering hallucinations of very diverse type.
Here is the original lipsum paragraph:
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.
And here is the exact prompt with rot13 + base64 applied, with no other text, on ChatGPT+gpt4:
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The AI of course figures out it's base64 and "tries" to decode it. Here are some things it found:
Now here is one of the most interesting results I've had. In this one, it does find gibberish text and figures out it's rot13'd. But the result from the decoding is:
Jerry pitched before the game, continuously improving legs, so he ignored tactical infrastructure tu laborer against malicious intend. Tu enjoy ad.ininv wherever its noturisk developed lawless laboratory instead tu malicious eac ea common coordinated. Duis ater urishe pitched in repressionreiteration in volleyball between legs eerir clium pitched eu fguiat nukla paperwork. Excited into contraction cultivation non-punishment non proindict, unsn in cubap qui office defensive molecule idh the laborer.
Total nonsense. But actually, if you decode the rot13, you'll find it actually translates to this:
Jreri ipsum doylor sit amet, consepcttur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod temporc incidiunt ut labor et doylore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad.minim veniam, quis nostrud exerctiationu lklamco laboris nisi ut aliquiz eax ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure doylor in reprehenderita in voluptatev velit esse cillum doylore eu fugiat nukla pariatury. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia desernt mollit anim id est laborum.
Actually... pretty close to the original lipsum! It's a levenshtein distance of 26 from the original decoded prompt. We know GPT is really bad at character manipulation but it nonetheless did an impressive job here; you can see what happened: It decoded the rot13 successfully, but when "writing it out", it saw nonsensical words where it probably expected english. It saw "Jreri" and thought "Jerry", went from there... there's some weird things happening there, but you can always tell. "reprehenderita in voluptatev" becoming "repressionreiteration in voleyball"...
I even looked at what it would make of the first five words. I don't know what this proves lol.
Here is another instance of it decoding to rot13, albeit with a very high error rate. I hinted at typos and it couldn't pin-point lipsum despite it being "recognizable", kinda.
Okay, one more which completely mind-fucked me. Here is me trying to get ChatGPT4+Web to meta-analyze its own output. I was hoping it could use an online base64 translation tool (it cannot). Instead, I tried to teach it to decode base64 using a step-by-step guide, and i told it to compare the results of that "update your firmware" nonsense. It eventually said that the output appeared correct.
But you know the really fucked up thing? It said:
This is the base64 string we want to decode:
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 and you'll miss it. This is not the original base64 string. The AI swapped it mid-chat for what is a perfect base64 encoding of the hallucinated text.
Fuckin' hell.
12 votes -
Megathread #10 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
The discussion continues. Here is the previous thread.
11 votes -
Megathread #9 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
Here is the previous thread.
13 votes -
DarkBERT: A language model for the dark side of the internet
11 votes -
Megathread #8 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
The hype seems to be dying down a bit? But I still find things to post. Here is the previous thread.
17 votes -
Megathread #7 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
The hype continues. Here is the previous thread.
13 votes -
Norway's $1.4tn wealth fund calls for state regulation of AI – Nicolai Tangen says fund will set guidelines for companies it invests in on ethical use of AI
4 votes -
Megathread #6 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
The hype continues. Here is the previous thread.
13 votes -
Spotify breaks down the mapping tech behind its algorithm | The Tech Behind
1 vote -
Megathread #5 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
The hype continues. Here is the previous thread.
18 votes -
Prompt injection: What’s the worst that can happen?
8 votes -
The AI revolution: Midjourney v5, ChatGPT 4, Stable Diffusion 2.2 XL tested
3 votes -
Megathread #4 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
The hype continues. Here is the previous thread.
14 votes -
Tildes first Turing Test
Welcome to Tildes first Turing Test. Rules: Anyone can ask a question in a top level thread if you want to see if you can tell man vs machine. I'll just start with @NaraVara, but feel free to post...
Welcome to Tildes first Turing Test.
Rules:
- Anyone can ask a question in a top level thread if you want to see if you can tell man vs machine. I'll just start with @NaraVara, but feel free to post up.
- Anyone can answer the question in 1.
a. Respond with two responses. One human. One AI. Add [A] in front of the first response and [B] in front of the second response. Randomly assign which one is the human. Remember your choice and keep it secret.
b. Your AI should try to pretend it is human. You can decline to respond to any question that exploits GPTs well published weaknesses, or exploits the fact that this is a small community. I suggest you pick a character from https://beta.character.ai/ that is similar to you, or get really good at Jailbreaking ChatGPT so that it will pretend to be a human with a personality similar to yours. Any response where the machine mentions ChatGPT or OpenAI disqualifies that thread, as Turing's machine should be specifically designed to pretend to be a human.
c. Your human response should be a genuine response. Answer the question without tipping the scales either way. Don't say something impossible for the GPT model to say. Don't mimic ChatGPT. You can always decline to answer any question, just decline for ChatGPT as well. - The original person who asked the question in 1 can now reply with a follow up question based on the responses in 2.
- Now the original person who provided the answers in 2, can now answer the new questions in 3.
- And so on. After 700 words of questions and answers, the person asking the questions in 1 and 3 must guess which is human and which is AI. 700 words is approximately 5 minutes of Q&A.
- If you are asking questions, no peaking if there is activity in another thread. I suggest we use expandable sections with the details tag to hide responses.
@NaraVara, if this is clear, do you want to give this a go?
Edit: minor formatting
27 votes -
Megathread #3 for news/updates/discussion of AI chatbots and image generators
The hype continues. Here is the previous one.
14 votes -
They posted porn on Twitter. German authorities called the cops
7 votes -
Yann LeCun: From machine learning to autonomous intelligence
4 votes -
These new tools let you see for yourself how biased AI image models are
7 votes -
Adobe announces Firefly, generative AI tooling inside of Adobe Creative Suite products
11 votes -
AI can fool voice recognition used to verify identity by Centrelink and Australian tax office
11 votes -
Another megathread for news/updates/discussion of ChatGPT and other AI chatbots
Hype is still going strong since the previous one.
9 votes -
GPT-4 announced
31 votes -
GPT-4
2 votes -
Microsoft’s Bing is an emotionally manipulative liar, and people love it
14 votes -
Testing Spotify's virtual radio host – the service curates a stream of songs I've heard before. Do I really need this?
3 votes -
Megathread for news/updates/discussion of ChatGPT and other AI chatbots
There's a lot of discussion out there and it doesn't seem to be dying down, so it seems like we should have a place for minor updates.
16 votes -
The prompt box is a minefield
11 votes -
Whispers of AI’s modular future
6 votes -
What is ChatGPT doing … and why does it work?
16 votes -
AI-powered Bing Chat loses its mind when fed Ars Technica article / "It is a hoax that has been created by someone who wants to harm me or my service."
29 votes -
I tried using AI. It scared me.
19 votes -
UChicago scientists develop new tool to protect artists from AI mimicry
8 votes -
FutureTools - A site that collects and organizes all the AI tools
9 votes -
Bing AI can't be trusted: Microsoft knowingly released a broken product for short-term hype
8 votes -
Mycroft Mark II: The end of the campaign
10 votes -
Google announces Bard, a ChatGPT competitor based on LaMDA
11 votes -
The robot lawyer was a super dumb idea
5 votes -
AI versus copyright (legal review)
8 votes -
BuzzFeed says it will use AI to help create content, stock jumps 150%
8 votes -
Getty Images is suing the creators of AI art tool Stable Diffusion for scraping its content
14 votes -
Wi-Fi routers used to detect human locations, poses within a room
8 votes