• De_Narm@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    Honestly, it would be weird for any industry to start caring about ethics after all this time.

    Not an endorsement of AI but a criticism of capitalism.

  • Ulrich@feddit.org
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    9 days ago

    Probably invaluable if you’re intent on pumping out slop.

    Video games are an art. If you outsource your art to shitty robots…what service is it that you’re providing? What are you doing that I can’t do my fucking self.

    • ssillyssadass@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      Way I see it AI should be allowed to be used on grunt work that stays in the background. Stuff nobody would notice but that would still take up time, so the dev can focus on making the stuff in the foreground better. Indie dev teams can be small, sometimes just one person, and the quality stands to increase if they can offload dumb, time-consuming tasks elsewhere.

      No, I’m not talking about LLMs here.

  • itkovian@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    Eurogamer is shit. You can serve ads without tracking. But, they don’t care.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      7 days ago

      Yeah I hate this trend of you have to subscribe in order to not be tracked. I just agree to the cookies and then block them at the OS level. Get to have my cake and eat it too.

  • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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    9 days ago

    doesn’t have to be an ethical nightmare. Public domain datasets on local hardware using renewable eletricity, who’s mad now, the artist you already can’t afford to pay because you have no fucking money anyway?

      • onslaught545@lemmy.zip
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        9 days ago

        Not all LLMs are the same. You can absolutely take a neural network model and train it yourself on your own dataset that doesn’t violate copyright.

        • Mika@sopuli.xyz
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          9 days ago

          I can almost guarantee that hundred billion params LLMs are not trained on that, and are trained on the whole web scraped to the furthest extent.

          The only sane and ethical solution going forward is to force to opensource all LLMs. Use the datasets generated by humanity - give back to humanity.

          • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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            9 days ago

            The only sane and ethical solution going forward is to force to opensource all LLMs.

            Jesus fucking christ. There are SO GODDAMN MANY open source LLMs, even from fucking scumbags like facebook. I get that there’s subtleties to the argument on the ProAI vs AntiAI side, but you guys just screech and scream.

            https://github.com/eugeneyan/open-llms

            • Mika@sopuli.xyz
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              9 days ago

              even meta

              Lol, ofc meta, they have the biggest bigdata out there, full of private data.

              Most of the opensources are recompilations of existing opensource LLMs.

              And the page you’ve listed is <10b mostly, bar LLMs with huge financing, and generally either copropate or Chinese behind them.

            • vrighter@discuss.tchncs.de
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              8 days ago

              there are barely any. I can’t name a single one offhand. Open weights means absolutely nothing about the actual source of those weights.

        • Riskable@programming.dev
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          9 days ago

          Training an AI is orthogonal to copyright since the process of training doesn’t involve distribution.

          You can train an AI with whatever TF you want without anyone’s consent. That’s perfectly legal fair use. It’s no different than if you copy a song from your PC to your phone.

          Copyright really only comes into play when someone uses an AI to distribute a derivative of someone’s copyrighted work. Even then, it’s really the end user that is even capable of doing such a thing by uploading the output of the AI somewhere.

    • HarkMahlberg@kbin.earth
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      9 days ago

      Beyond the copyright issues and energy issues, AI does some serious damage to your ability to do actual hard research. And I’m not just talking about “AI brain.”

      Let’s say you’re looking to solve a programming problem. If you use a search engine and look up the question or a string of keywords, what do you usually do? You look through each link that comes up and judge books by their covers (to an extent). “Do these look like reputable sites? Have I heard of any of them before?” You scroll click a bunch of them and read through them. Now you evaluate their contents. “Have I already tried this info? Oh this answer is from 15 years ago, it might be outdated.” Then you pare down your links to a smaller number and try the solution each one provides, one at a time.

      Now let’s say you use an AI to do the same thing. You pray to the Oracle, and the Oracle responds with a single answer. It’s a total soup of its training data. You can’t tell where specifically it got any of this info. You just have to trust it on faith. You try it, maybe it works, maybe it doesn’t. If it doesn’t, you have to write a new prayer try again.

      Even running a local model means you can’t discern the source material from the output. This isn’t Garbage In Garbage Out, but Stew In Soup Out. You can feed an AI a corpus of perfectly useful information, but it will churn everthing into a single liquidy mass at the end. You can’t be critical about the output, because there’s nothing to critique but a homogenous answer. And because the process is destructive, you can’t un-soup the output. You’ve robbed yourself of the ability to learn from the input, and put all your faith into the Oracle.

      • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        The topic is : using AIs for game dev.

        1. I’m pretty sure that generating placeholder art isn’t going to ruin my ability to research
        2. AIs need to be used TAKING THEIR FLAWS INTO ACCOUNT and for very specific things.

        I’m just going to be upfront: AI haters don’t know the actual way this shit works except that by existing, LLMS drain oceans and create more global warming than the entire petrol industry, and AI bros are filling their codebases with junk code that’s going to explode in their faces from anywhere between 6 months to 3 years.

        There is a sane take : use AIs sparingly, taking their flaws into consideration, for placeholder work, or once you obtain a training base on content you are allowed to use. Run it locally, and use renewable sources for electricity.

        • HarkMahlberg@kbin.earth
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          9 days ago

          Wild to see you call for a “sane take” when you strawman the actual water problem into “draining the oceans.”

          Local residents with nearby data centers aren’t being told to take fewer showers with salt water from the ocean.

          • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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            9 days ago

            Is that a problem with the existence of llms as a technology, or shitty corporations working with corrupt governments in starving local people of resources to turn a quick buck?

            If you are allowing a data center to be built, you need to make sure you have power etc to build it without negativitely impacting the local people. It’s not the fault of an LLM that they fucked this shit up.

            • very_well_lost@lemmy.world
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              8 days ago

              Are you really gonna use the “guns don’t kill people, people kill people” argument to defend LLMS?

              Let’s not forget that the first ‘L’ stands for “large”. These things do not exist without massive, power and resource hungry data centers. You can’t just say “Blame government mismanagement! Blame corporate greed!” without acknowledging that LLMs cease to exist without those things.

              And even with all of those resources behind it, the technology is still only marginally useful at best. LLMs still hallucinate, they still confidently distribute misinformation, they still contribute to mental health crises in vulnerable individuals, and no one really has any idea how to stop those things from happening.

              What tangible benefit is there to LLMs that justifies their absurd cost? Honestly?

              • Skullgrid@lemmy.world
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                8 days ago

                making up deficiencies in your own artistic and linguistic skills , getting easy starting points for coding solutions.

                LLMs still hallucinate,

                Emergent behaviour can be useful in coming up with new ideas that you were not expecting and areas to explore

                they still confidently distribute misinformation,

                yeah, that’s been a problem since language, if you want a statement more close to the topic at hand, the printing press.

                they still contribute to mental health crises in vulnerable individuals, and no one really has any idea how to stop those things from happening.

                so does the fucking internet.

                Are you really gonna use the “guns don’t kill people, people kill people” argument to defend LLMS?

                chad.jpg

      • Mika@sopuli.xyz
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        9 days ago

        you can’t be critical about the answer

        You actually can, and you should be. And the process is not destructive since you can always undo in tools like cursor, or discard in git.

        Besides, you can steer a good coding LLM in a right direction. The better you understand what are you doing - the better.

        • HarkMahlberg@kbin.earth
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          9 days ago

          You misunderstood, I wasn’t saying you can’t Ctrl Z after using the output, but that the process of training an AI on a corpus yields a black box. This process can’t be reverse engineered to see how it came up with it’s answers.

          It can’t tell you how much of one source it used over another. It can’t tell you what it’s priorities are in evaluating data… not without the risk of hallucinating on you when you ask it.

    • eldebryn@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      Out of legit curiosity, how many models do you know trained exclusively on public domain data, which are actually useful?

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      7 days ago

      That’s like saying that colonies on Mars are the future. In the future colonies on Mars will be the direction things are going, (assuming we don’t global warm ourselves to death first) but we’re not there yet. AI have yet to prove themselves.

    • itkovian@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      All I ask is in what way are LLMs progress. Ability to generate a lot of slop is pretty much only thing LLMs are good for. Even that is not really cheap, especially factoring the environmental costs.

      • mhague@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        How much do you know about transformers?

        Have you ever programmed an interpreter for interactive fiction / MUDs, before all this AI crap? It’s a great example of the power that even super tiny models can accomplish. NLP interfaces are a useful thing for people.

        Also consider that Firefox or Electron apps require more RAM and CPU and waste more energy than small language models. A Gemma slm can translate things into English using less energy than it requires to open a modern browser. And I know that because I’m literally watching the resources get used.

        • itkovian@lemmy.world
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          8 days ago

          I am not implying that transformers-based models have to be huge to be useful. I am only talking about LLMs. I am questioning the purported goal of LLMs, i.e., to replace all humans in as many creative fields as possible, in the context of it’s cost, both environmental and social.

      • NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip
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        9 days ago

        LLMs are actually spectacular for indexing large amounts of text data and pulling out the answer to a query. Combine that with natural language processing and it is literally what we all thought Ask Jeeves was back in the day. If you ever spent time sifting through stack overflow pages or parsing discussion threads, that is what it is good at. And many models actually provide ways to get a readout of the “thought process” and links to pages that support the answer which drastically reduces the impact of hallucinations.

        And many of those don’t necessarily require significant power usage… relative to what is already running in data centers.

        The problem is that people use it and decide it is “like magic” and then insist on using it for EVERYTHING. And you go from “Write me a simple function to interface with this specific API” to “Write me an application to do my taxes and then file them for me”

        Of course, there is also the issue of where training data comes from. Which is why so much of the “generative AI” stuff is so disgusting because it is just stealing copyrighted data left and right. Rather than the search engine style LLMs that mostly just ignore the proverbial README_FBI.txt file.

        And the “this is magic” is on both sides. The evangelists are demonstrably morons. But the rabid anti-AI/“AI” crowd are just as bad with “it gave you a wrong answer, it is worthless”. Think of it less like a magic box and more like asking a question on a message board. You are gonna get a LOT of FUD and it is on you to do additional searches to corroborate when it actually matters.

        Like a lot of things AI/“AI”, they are REALLY good at replacing intern/junior level employees (and all the consequences of that…) and are a way to speed through grunt work. And, much like farming a task out to that junior level employee, you need to actually supervise it and check the results. Whether that is making sure it actually does what you want it to do or making sure they didn’t steal copyrighted work.

      • salty_chief@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        Sure everything starts with meager beginnings. The AI you’re upset about existing may find the cure to many diseases. It may save the planet one day.

    • CosmoNova@lemmy.world
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      9 days ago

      It can be stopped just like climate change but we won‘t and kill humanity instead apparently.

      • salty_chief@lemmy.world
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        9 days ago

        We as humans can take steps to lessen our impact on the planet. We cannot stop climate change. The planet by design will always change climates. It has changed without humans influence and it will continue after we are gone.

        • very_well_lost@lemmy.world
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          8 days ago

          Don’t be pedantic. Anyone with half a brain knows that when someone brings up “climate change” they’re referring to “human-made climate change” — and it’s completely uncontroversial that the changes we’ve made since the industrial revolution have greatly outweighed the changes of the Earth’s natural climate cycles.

        • pulsewidth@lemmy.world
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          8 days ago

          Yep that’s absolutely not what people are talking about when they say ‘climate change’ in this context, they mean anthropogenic climate change, and you know it. Your bad faith response shows you have no interest in an honest discussion.

      • ssillyssadass@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        I can guarantee you that there will not be a point in time at which everybody on the planet just decides to stop using AI out of the goodness of their hearts.

    • bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world
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      8 days ago

      This really depends on what you consider “progress”. Some forms of AI are neat pieces of tech, there’s no denying that. However, all I’ve really seen them do in an industrial sense is shrink workforces to save a buck via automation, and produce a noticably worse product.

      That quality is sure to improve, but what won’t change is the fact that real humans with skill and talent are out of a job because of a fancy piece of software. I personally don’t think of that as progress, but that’s just me.

      • Victor Gnarly@lemmy.world
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        8 days ago

        Typographers saw the same thing with personal computing in the latter half of the 90s. Almost over night, everyone starting printing their own documentation and comic sans became their canary in the coal mine. It was progress but progress is rarely good for everyone. There’s always a give and a take.

        • bigmclargehuge@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          As another user said, typographers still exist. And, until now, computers weren’t really a threat to their job security. They were just a new set of tools they had to adapt to. But, if I was running a business and had little regard for ethics, why would I hire a typographer when I could just ask an AI to generate a new font for my billboard, and have it done in 30 seconds for free?

          I get the argument that AI is a tool that lowers the barrier of entry to certain fields, which is absolutely true. If I wanted to be a graphic designer today, I could do it with AI. But, when I went to sell my logo to the small company down the street, I’d have to come to terms with the fact that the owner of that business also happened to become a graphic designer that very morning, and all of a sudden my career is over before it started.

        • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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          7 days ago

          Except typographers still exist, we need them to create fonts that aren’t comic sans.

    • PastafARRian@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 days ago

      If someone said this in 1970 it would be just as true as you saying it today. Would you have used generative AI tools for video game development back then?