Let the votes fall where they may, upvote if you like AI, downvote if you don’t…

  • Libra00@lemmy.ml
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    21 hours ago

    I dunno that ‘like’ is an accurate description; I don’t ‘like’ my wrench, but it’s useful for turning bolts. AI is the same. I’m working on a novel project and I’ve been using ChatGPT and related tools to help with things like worldbuilding, naming, formatting, structure, grammar, etc, basically everything but the actual writing itself. It’s been a big help, but I can also see the concerns of people whose jobs/livelihoods/etc are threatened by it; that wrench also works pretty good as a blunt object to chuck at peoples’ heads.

    • over_clox@lemmy.worldOP
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      20 hours ago

      I was actually developing a crude form of AI, for graphics processing, between 2009 to 2017.

      When I realized that my algorithms could be repurposed to the point of cloning someone else’s voice, if I just had enough RAM and processing time, nobody believed me back in 2017.

      I will never touch AI again.

      • Libra00@lemmy.ml
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        19 hours ago

        Chucking 8 years of work seems like a drastic step, especially since others were (and now have) surely developed similar algorithms and are a lot less scrupulous about how they train and use them. Why did you feel like you had to step away from the field altogether after such a big time investment? Not that I’m judging, I’m just curious at the motivations involved.

        • over_clox@lemmy.worldOP
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          18 hours ago

          My original algorithms were specifically designed to help artists perform nearly perfect color matching, based largely on text inputs. It started off as a single purpose application, but totally human driven.

          The more I used and tested my own software, it taught me more than I even expected to learn about photochromatic processing. More than I even designed it to do even.

          I was already also studying acoustics around the same time. I saw how well my chromatography software was working, and just barely started adapting the algorithm to process acoustics.

          I quickly realized that I didn’t have nearly enough RAM or processing power to do anything meaningful in any sensible timeframe, but I could already see that it was possible to go as far as changing one’s voice with the voice print of someone else.

          I announced that with online friends at the time, around 2017, and nobody believed me. Probably because I couldn’t quite prove it yet. But I knew it.

          The more I thought about that, the more I thought it would only contribute to fraud. So, I just fucking stopped, slammed on development brakes, and said fuckit.

          I don’t want to be part of the problem, I just wanted to design a better color filter/processor system.