• Technus@lemmy.zip
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    1 month ago

    These models are nothing more than glorified autocomplete algorithms parroting the responses to questions that already existed in their input.

    They’re completely incapable of critical thought or even basic reasoning. They only seem smart because people tend to ask the same stupid questions over and over.

    If they receive an input that doesn’t have a strong correlation to their training, they just output whatever bullshit comes close, whether it’s true or not. Which makes them truly dangerous.

    And I highly doubt that’ll ever be fixed because the brainrotten corporate middle-manager types that insist on implementing this shit won’t ever want their “state of the art AI chatbot” to answer a customer’s question with “sorry, I don’t know.”

    I can’t wait for this stupid AI craze to eat its own tail.

    • Terrasque@infosec.pub
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      1 month ago

      I generally agree with your comment, but not on this part:

      parroting the responses to questions that already existed in their input.

      They’re quite capable of following instructions over data where neither the instruction nor the data was anywhere in the training data.

      They’re completely incapable of critical thought or even basic reasoning.

      Critical thought, generally no. Basic reasoning, that they’re somewhat capable of. And chain of thought amplifies what little is there.

      • AliasAKA@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I don’t believe this is quite right. They’re capable of following instructions that aren’t in their data but appear like things which were (that is, it can probabilistically interpolate between what it has seen in training and what you prompted it with — this is why prompting can be so important). Chain of thought is essentially automated prompt engineering; if it’s seen a similar process (eg from an online help forum or study materials) it can emulate that process with different keywords and phrases. The models themselves however are not able to perform a is to b therefore b is to a, arguably the cornerstone of symbolic reasoning. This is in part because it has no state model or true grounding, only probabilities you could observe a token given some context. So even with chain of thought, it is not reasoning, it’s just doing very fancy interpolation of the words and phrases used in the initial prompt to generate a prompt that is probably going to give a better answer, not because of reasoning, but because of a stochastic process.

    • ContrarianTrail@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      The current AI discussion I’m reading online has eerie similarities to the debate about legalizing cannabis 15 years ago. One side praises it as a solution to all of society’s problems, while the other sees it as the devil’s lettuce. Unsurprisingly, both sides were wrong, and the same will probably apply to AI. It’ll likely turn out that the more dispassionate people in the middle, who are neither strongly for nor against it, will be the ones who had the most accurate view on it.

      • Lvxferre@mander.xyz
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        1 month ago

        It’ll likely turn out that the more dispassionate people in the middle, who are neither strongly for nor against it, will be the ones who had the most accurate view on it.

        I believe that some of the people in the middle will have more accurate views on the subject, indeed. However, note that there are multiple ways to be in the “middle ground”, and some are sillier than the extremes.

        For example, consider the following views:

        1. That LLMs are genuinely intelligent, but useless.
        2. That LLMs are dumb, but useful.

        Both positions are middle grounds - and yet they can’t be accurate at the same time.

  • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    Of course they don’t, logical reasoning isn’t just guessing a word or phrase that comes next.

    As much as some of these tech bros want human thinking and creativity to be reducible to mere pattern recognition, it isn’t, and it never will be.

    But the corpos and Capitalists don’t care, because their whole worldview is based in the idea that humans are only as valuable as the profitability they generate for a company.

    They don’t see any value in poetry, or philosophy, or literature, or historical analysis, or visual arts unless it can be patented, trademarked, copyrighted, and sold to consumers at a good markup.

    As if the only difference between Van Goh’s art and an LLM is the size of sample data and efficiency of an algorithm.

    • leisesprecher@feddit.org
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      1 month ago

      You don’t have to get all philosophical, since the value art is almost by definition debatable.

      These models can’t do basic logic. They already fail at this. And that’s actually relevant to corpos if you can suddenly convince a chatbot to reduce your bill by 60% because bears don’t eat mangos or some other nonsensical statement.

      • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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        1 month ago

        It’s all connected, the reasons why it can’t do basic logical reasoning are the same for why it can’t replace human art.

        It’s because neither of those activities are mere pattern recognition and statistical inference, which is all LLMs will ever be.

        • 9488fcea02a9@sh.itjust.works
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          1 month ago

          LLMs and image generating models are completely different things. Outputting an image doesnt require or benefit from reason and logic (other than making the model “understand” the prompt). Drawing a three headed monkey isnt “logical” and doesnt follow “reason” but that’s ok because art isnt about making photorealisitic images.

          AI images could totally be useful as a tool in art. “But a computer made it! It’s not art!” It’s the same tired argument we heard about electronic music before.

          But the fediverse seems to have such a hate boner for ANYTHING associated with AI (dont get me wrong, there is lots to hate. Mostly with tech-bro grifting…) that people are unable to see that these can be useful complements to human creativity.

          Here’s another example… People crying that when an image contains AI generated elements, or maybe a video game contains some AI assets. People fly into a rage and want to dismiss the ENTIRE work and throw it all out. Human art doesnt require 100% human hands to make. Go look at any famous painting by a renaissance master. Did you know a lot of these guys had whole workshops of lackeys filling in background details for them? Are we going to throw out all the raphael and rembrandt paintings because they had assistance from other uncredited people?

          Same with AI. Why cant an artist spend MORE time on important details and let AI draw some happy little trees in the background?

          • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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            1 month ago

            I think you’re reading too deep into what I was saying. Perhaps I wasn’t being clear, my bad if so.

            I’m not against AI tools to assist people’s work. Using them for grammar/spellcheck, code completion and automated testing, artwork help for filling in repetitive background details/textures, automatically removing background details in pictures like dumpsters or people photo bombing, etc.

            What I am against is the grifting, the near religious devotion by tech bros to AI replacing humans in all areas of life, and the fact that the groups and companies controlling almost all of the development of this tech are multi-billion/trillion dollar corpos that don’t make all aspects of their tech open source and are 100% motivated by profit.

            • 9488fcea02a9@sh.itjust.works
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              1 month ago

              Sorry, my comment wasnt really directed at you specifically… Just the fediverse general hate for all things AI

              yours was the first that mentioned “art” which triggered me, lol

              I think we are actually both on the same page… You have a reasonable view of the whole AI thing. It’s rare on lemmy/mastodon

              • Lettuce eat lettuce@lemmy.ml
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                1 month ago

                Thanks for your response. Yeah, I think the issue isn’t the technology, it’s who controls and owns it.

                I doubt it would be anywhere near as controversial if it were all fully open source and run by public organizations and communities that were interested in bettering the human experience and reducing mundane work vs maximizing profitability.

    • Eccitaze@yiffit.net
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      1 month ago

      I keep thinking of the anticapitalist manifesto that a spinoff team from the disco elysium developers dropped, and this part in particular stands out to me and helps crystallize exactly why I don’t like AI art:

      All art is communication — dialogue across time, space and thought. In its rawest, it is one mind’s ability to provoke emotion in another. Large language models — simulacra, cold comfort, real-doll pocket-pussy, cyberspace freezer of an abandoned IM-chat — which are today passed off for “artificial intelligence”, will never be able to offer a dialogue with the vision of another human being.

      Machine-generated works will never satisfy or substitute the human desire for art, as our desire for art is in its core a desire for communication with another, with a talent who speaks to us across worlds and ages to remind us of our all-encompassing human universality. There is no one to connect to in a large language model. The phone line is open but there’s no one on the other side.

  • WalnutLum@lemmy.ml
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    1 month ago

    I still think it’s better to refer to LLMs as “stochastic lexical indexes” than AI

    • exocortex@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 month ago

      AI in general is a shitty term. It’s mostly PR. The Term “Intelligence” is very fuzzy and difficult to define - especially for people who are not in the field of machine learning.

  • oakey66@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I work for a consulting company and they’re truly going off the deep end pushing consultants to sell this miracle solution. They are now doing weekly product demos and all of them are absolutely useless hype grifts. It’s maddening.

  • vonxylofon@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I still fail to see how people expect LLMs to reason. It’s like expecting a slice of pizza to reason. That’s just not what it does.

    Although Porsche managed to make a car with the engine in the most idiotic place win literally everything on Earth, so I guess I’m leaving a little possibility that the slice of pizza will outreason GPT 4.

    • Michal@programming.dev
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      1 month ago

      LLMs keep getting better at imitating humans thus for those who don’t know how the technology works, it’ll seem just like it thinks for itself.

    • Lvxferre@mander.xyz
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      1 month ago

      I still fail to see how people expect LLMs to reason. It’s like expecting a slice of pizza to reason. That’s just not what it does.

      This text provides a rather good analogy between people who think that LLMs reason and people who believe in mentalists.

    • Aatube@kbin.melroy.org
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      1 month ago

      Water isn’t wet, water wets things, and watered things are wet by the wet but the water ain’t wet as it simply causes wet and thus water isn’t truly wet as water is pure water and pure water isn’t wet and water is not wet and water isn’t wet it’s not wet it’s not wet it’s not dry it’s not wet and it’s not wet it is wet it’s wet and you can see it is wet but it doesn’t look like it it’s dry it’s just wet and it’s wet so I just need it and it’s wet it’s not like it’s dry it’s wet it’s wet so it’s not dry but it’s wet it’s not wet so it’s wet it’s not dry and it’s not dry it’s wet and I just want you know how it was just to be careful that I just don’t know what to say I don’t know what you can tell him I just don’t

    • tinsukE@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I wouldn’t doubt that LLMs got some special input to deal with the specific examples of this paper, or similar enough.

  • Lvxferre@mander.xyz
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    1 month ago

    Here’s a simple test showing lack of logic skills of LLM-based chatbots.

    1. Pick some public figure (politician, celebrity, etc.), whose parents are known by name, but not themselves public figures.
    2. Ask the bot of your choice “who is the [father|mother] of [public person]?”, to check if the bot contains such piece of info.
    3. If the bot contains such piece of info, start a new chat.
    4. In the new chat, ask the opposite question - “who is the [son|daughter] of [parent mentioned in the previous answer]?”. And watch the bot losing its shit.

    I’ll exemplify it with ChatGPT-4o (as provided by DDG) and Katy Perry (parents: Mary Christine and Maurice Hudson).

    Note that step #3 is not optional. You must start a new chat; plenty bots are able to retrieve tokens from their previous output within the same chat, and that would stain the test.

    Failure to consistently output correct information shows that those bots are unable to perform simple logic operations like “if A is the parent of B, then B is the child of A”.

    I’ll also pre-emptively address some ad hoc idiocy that I’ve seen sealions lacking basic reading comprehension (i.e. the sort of people who claims that those systems are able to reason) using against this test:

    • “Ackshyually the bot is forgerring it and then reminring it. Just like hoominz” - cut off the crap.
    • “Ackshyually you wouldn’t remember things from different conversations.” - cut off the crap.
    • [Repeats the test while disingenuously = idiotically omitting step 3] - congrats for proving that there’s a context window and nothing else, you muppet.
    • “You can’t prove that it is not smart” - inversion of the burden of the proof. You can’t prove that your mum didn’t get syphilis by sharing a cactus-shaped dildo with Hitler.