Avram Piltch is the editor in chief of Tom’s Hardware, and he’s written a thoroughly researched article breaking down the promises and failures of LLM AIs.

  • lily33@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    They have the right to ingest data, not because they’re “just learning like a human would". But because I - a human - have a right to grab all data that’s available on the public internet, and process it however I want, including by training statistical models. The only thing I don’t have a right to do is distribute it (or works that resemble it too closely).

    In you actually show me people who are extracting books from LLMs and reading them that way, then I’d agree that would be piracy - but that’d be such a terrible experience if it ever works - that I can’t see it actually happening.

      • lily33@lemm.ee
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        I’m sick and tired of this “parrots the works of others” narrative. Here’s a challenge for you: go to https://huggingface.co/chat/, input some prompt (for example, “Write a three paragraphs scene about Jason and Carol playing hide and seek with some other kids. Jason gets injured, and Carol has to help him.”). And when you get the response, try to find the author that it “parroted”. You won’t be able to - because it wouldn’t just reproduce someone else’s already made scene. It’ll mesh maaany things from all over the training data in such a way that none of them will be even remotely recognizable.

          • keegomatic@kbin.social
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            So is your comment. And mine. What do you think our brains do? Magic?

            edit: This may sound inflammatory but I mean no offense

            • RickRussell_CA@beehaw.orgOP
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              No, I get it. I’m not really arguing that what separates humans from machines is “libertarian free will” or some such.

              But we can properly argue that LLM output is derivative because we know it’s derivative, because we designed it. As humans, we have the privilege of recognizing transformative human creativity in our laws as a separate entity from derivative algorithmic output.

          • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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            So is literally every human work in the last 1000 years in every context.

            Nothing is “original”. It’s all derivative. Feeding copyrighted work into an algorithm does not in any way violate any copyright law, and anyone telling you otherwise is a liar and a piece of shit. There is no valid interpretation anywhere close.

            • zygo_histo_morpheus@programming.dev
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              Every human work isn’t mechanically derivative. The entire point of the article is that the way LLMs learn and create derivative text isn’t equivalent to the way humans do the same thing.

              • conciselyverbose@kbin.social
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                It’s complete and utter nonsense and they’re bad people for writing it. The complexity of the AI does not matter and if it did, they’re setting themselves up to lose again in the very near future when companies make shit arbitrarily complex to meet their unhinged fake definitions.

                But none of it matters because literally no part of this in any way violates copyright law. Processing data is not and does not in any way resemble copyright infringement.

                • RickRussell_CA@beehaw.orgOP
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                  1 year ago

                  This issue is easily resolved. Create the AI that produces useful output without using copyrighted works, and we don’t have a problem.

                  If you take the copyrighted work out of the input training set, and the algorithm can no longer produce the output, then I’m confident saying that the output was derived from the inputs.

          • lily33@lemm.ee
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            From Wikipedia, “a derivative work is an expressive creation that includes major copyrightable elements of a first, previously created original work”.

            You can probably can the output of an LLM ‘derived’, in the same way that if I counted the number of 'Q’s in Harry Potter the result derived from Rowling’s work.

            But it’s not ‘derivative’.

            Technically it’s possible for an LLM to output a derivative work if you prompt it to do so. But most of its outputs aren’t.

            • RickRussell_CA@beehaw.orgOP
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              a derivative work is an expressive creation that includes major copyrightable elements of a first, previously created original work

              What was fed into the algorithm? A human decided which major copyrighted elements of previously created original work would seed the algorithm. That’s how we know it’s derivative.

              If I take somebody’s copyrighted artwork, and apply Photoshop filters that change the color of every single pixel, have I made an expressive creation that does not include copyrightable elements of a previously created original work? The courts have said “no”, and I think the burden is on AI proponents to show how they fed copyrighted work into an mechanical algorithm, and produced a new expressive creation free of copyrightable elements.

              • lily33@lemm.ee
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                I think the test for “free of copyrightable elements” is pretty simple - can you look at the new creation and recognize any copyrightable elements in it? The process by which it was created doesn’t matter. Maybe I made this post entirely by copy-pasting phrases from other people, who knows (well, I didn’t, only because it would be too much work), but it does not infringe either way…

        • state_electrician@discuss.tchncs.de
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          Well, I think that these models learn in a way similar to humans as in it’s basically impossible to tell where parts of the model came from. And as such the copyright claims are ridiculous. We need less copyright, not more. But, on the other hand, LLMs are not humans, they are tools created by and owned by corporations and I hate to see them profiting off of other people’s work without proper compensation.

          I am fine with public domain models being trained on anything and being used for noncommercial purposes without being taken down by copyright claims.

          • RickRussell_CA@beehaw.orgOP
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            it’s basically impossible to tell where parts of the model came from

            AIs are deterministic.

            1. Train the AI on data without the copyrighted work.

            2. Train the same AI on data with the copyrighted work.

            3. Ask the two instances the same question.

            4. The difference is the contribution of the copyrighted work.

            There may be larger questions of precisely how an AI produces one answer when trained with a copyrighted work, and another answer when not trained with the copyrighted work. But we know why the answers are different, and we can show precisely what contribution the copyrighted work makes to the response to any prompt, just by running the AI twice.

      • RandoCalrandian@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Is there a meaningful difference between reproducing the work and giving a summary? Because I’ll absolutely be using AI to filter all the editorial garbage out of news, setup and trained myself to surface what is meaningful to me stripped of all advertising, sponsorships, and detectable bias

        • Tarte@kbin.social
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          I have yet to find an LLM that can summarize a text without errors. I already mentioned this in another post a few days back, but Google‘s new search preview is driving me mad with all the hidden factual errors. They make me click only to realize that the LLM told me what I wanted to find, not what is there (wrong names, wrong dates, etc.).

          I greatly prefer the old excerpt summaries over the new imaginary ones (they‘re currently A/B testing).

    • donuts@kbin.social
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      You’re making two, big incorrect assumptions:

      1. Simply seeing something on the internet does not give you any legal or moral rights to use that thing in any way other than things which are, or have previously been, deemed to be “fair use” by a court of law. Individuals have personal rights over their likeness and persona, and copyright holders have rights over their works, whether they are on the internet or not. In other words, there is a big difference between “visible in public” and “public domain”.
      2. More importantly, something that might be considered “fair use” for a human being do to is not necessary “fair use” when a computer or “AI” does it. Judgements of what is and is not fair use are made on a case by case basis as a legal defense against copyright infringement claims, and multiple factors (purpose of use, nature of original work, degree and sustainability of use, market effect, etc.) are often taken into consideration. At the very least, AI use has serious implications on sustainability and markets, especially compared to examples of human use.

      I know these are really tough pills for AI fans to swallow, but you know what they say… “If it seems too good to be true, it probably is.”

      • lily33@lemm.ee
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        One the contrary - the reason copyright is called that is because it started as the right to make copies. Since then it’s been expanded to include more than just copies, such as distributing derivative works

        But the act of distribution is key. If I wanted to, I could write whatever derivative works in my personal diary.

        I also have the right to count the number of occurrences of the letter ‘Q’ in Harry Potter workout Rowling’s permission. This I can also post my count online for other lovers of ‘Q’, because it’s not derivative (it is ‘derived’, but ‘derivative’ is different - according to Wikipedia it means ‘includes major copyrightable elements’).

        Or do more complex statistical analysis.

    • raccoona_nongrata@beehaw.org
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      I think this opinion is going to be looked at a lot like the anti-privacy arguments when Facebook and Google were first revealed to be massively invading people’s privacy.

      We look at those platforms with disdain now, but at the time all you ever heard people saying over and over was “If you have nothing to hide who cares about privacy?” and “Anything you put on the Internet is fair game.” and “your privacy is already gone, nothing we can or should do now.”

      And then that careless attitude led to things that those people hadn’t foreseen, like the Cambridge Analytica scandal, massive troll farm campaigns and Trump’s election.

      Looking back we’re going to see this argument about data scraping to fuel LLMs in the same way.

  • FlapKap@feddit.dk
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    1 year ago

    I like the point about LLMs interpolating data while humans extrapolate. I think that’s sums up a key difference in “learning”. It’s also an interesting point that we anthropomorphise ML models by using words such as learning or training, but I wonder if there are other better words to use. Fitting?

    • Amju Wolf@pawb.social
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      Isn’t interpolation and extrapolation the same thing effectively, given a complex enough system?

      • maynarkh@feddit.nl
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        No, repeated extrapolation results in eventually making everything that ever could be made, constant interpolation would result in creating the same “average” work over and over.

        The difference is infinite vs zero variety.

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          Fun fact, an open interval is topologically isomorphic the the entire number line. In practice they’re often different but you started talking about limits (“eventually”), where that will definitely come up.

      • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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        Depending on the geometry of the state space, very literally yes. Think about a sphere, there’s a straight line passing from Denver to Guadalajara, roughly hitting Delhi on the way. Is Delhi in between them (interpolation), or behind one from the other (extrapolation)? Kind of both, unless you move the goalposts to add distance limits on interpolation, which could themselves be broken by another geometry

    • frog 🐸@beehaw.org
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      I also like the point about interpolation vs extrapolation. It’s demonstrated when you look at art history (or the history of any other creative field). Humans don’t look at paintings and create something that’s predictable based on those paintings. They go “what happens when I take that idea and go even further?” An LLM could never have invented Cubism after looking at Paul Cezanne’s paintings, but Pablo Picasso did.

  • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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    Let’s be clear on where the responsibility belongs, here. LLMs are neither alive nor sapient. They themselves have no more “rights” than a toaster. The question is whether the humans training the AIs have the right to feed them such-and-such data.

    The real problem is the way these systems are being anthropomorphized. Keep your attention firmly on the man behind the curtain.

    • Storksforlegs@beehaw.org
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      Yes, these are the same people who are charging a fee to use their AI and profiting. Placing the blame and discussion on the AI itself conveniently overlooks a lot here.

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      You know, I think ChatGPT is way ahead of a toaster. Maybe it’s more like a small animal of some kind.

      • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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        One could equally claim that the toaster was ahead, because it does something useful in the physical world. Hmm. Is a robot dog more alive than a Tamagotchi?

        • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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          There are a lot of subjects where ChatGPT knows more than I do.

          Does it know more than someone who has studied that subject their whole life? Of course not. But those people aren’t available to talk to me on a whim. ChatGPT is available, and it’s really useful. Far more useful than a toaster.

          As long as you only use it for things where a mistake won’t be a problem - it’s a great tool. And you can also use it for “risky” decisions but take the information it gave you to an expert for verification before acting.

          • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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            Sorry to break it to you, but it doesn’t “know” anything except what text is most likely to come after the text you just typed. It’s an autocomplete. A very sophisticated one, granted, but it has no notion of “fact” and no real understanding of the content of what it’s saying.

            Saying that it knows what it’s spouting back to you is exactly what I warned against up above: anthropomorphization. People did this with ELIZA too, and it’s even more dangerous now than it was then.

  • DarkenLM@artemis.camp
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    Machines don’t Lear like humans yet.

    Our brains are a giant electrical/chemical system that somehow creates consciousness. We might be able to create that in a computer. And the day it happens, then what will be the difference between a human and a true AI?

    • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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      If you read the article, there’s “experts” saying that human comprehension is fundamentally computationally intractable, which is basically a religious standpoint. Like, ChatGPT isn’t intellegent yet, partly because it doesn’t really have long term memory, but yeah, there’s overwhelming evidence the brain is a machine like any other.

      • barsoap@lemm.ee
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        fundamentally computationally intractable

        …using current AI architecture, and the insight isn’t new it’s maths. This is currently the best idea we have about the subject. Trigger warning: Cybernetics, and lots of it.

        Meanwhile yes of course brains are machines like any other claiming otherwise is claiming you can compute incomputable functions which a physical and logical impossibility. And it’s fucking annoying to talk about this topic with people who don’t understand computability. Usually turns into a shouting match of “you’re claiming the existence of something like a soul, some metaphysical origin of the human mind” vs. “no I’m not” vs. “yes you are but you don’t understand why”.

        • CanadaPlus@lemmy.sdf.org
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          …using current AI architecture, and the insight isn’t new it’s maths.

          That is not what van Rooij et al. said, which is who was cited in here. They published their essay here, which I haven’t really read, but which appears to make an argument about any possible computer. They’re psychologists and I don’t see any LaTeX in there, so they must be missing something.

          Unfortunately I can’t open your link, although it sounds interesting. A feedforward network can approximate any computable function if it gets to be arbitrarily large, but depending on how you want to feed an agent inputs from it’s environment and read it’s actions a single function might not be enough.

          • barsoap@lemm.ee
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            They’re psychologists and I don’t see any LaTeX in there,

            Oh no that’s LaTeX alright. I can tell by everything from the font to the line breaking, some of it is hard to imitate with an office suite, the rest impossible. But I’ll totally roll with dunking on psychologists :)

            In this paper, we undercut these views and claims by presenting a mathematical proof of inherent intractability (formally, NP-hardness) of the task that these AI engineers set themselves

            Yeah I don’t buy it. If human cognition was inherently NP-hard we’d have brains the size of suns. OTOH it might be “close to NP” in the same sense as the travelling salesman is NP, but it’s quite feasible indeed to get answers guaranteed to not be X% (with user choice of X) worse than the actually shortest path which is good enough in practice. We do, after all, have to operate largely in real-time, there’s no time to be perfect when a sabre tooth tiger is trying to eat you.

            Or think about SAT solvers: They can solve large classes of problems ridiculously fast even though the problem is, in its full generality, NP. And the class they’re fast on is so large that people very much do treat solving SAT as tractable: Because it usually is. Maybe that is why we get headaches from hard problems.

            Unfortunately I can’t open your link, although it sounds interesting.

            Then let me throw citations at you. The first is for the underlying theory characterising the necessary cybernetic characteristics of human minds, the second one applies it to current approaches to AI. This comes out of German publicly-funded basic research (Max Planck / FIAS)

            Nikolić, Danko. “Practopoiesis: Or how life fosters a mind.” Journal of Theoretical Biology 373 (2015): 40-61.
            Nikolić, Danko. “Why deep neural nets cannot ever match biological intelligence and what to do about it?.” International Journal of Automation and Computing 14.5 (2017): 532-541.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    🤖 I’m a bot that provides automatic summaries for articles:

    Click here to see the summary

    Unfortunately, many people believe that AI bots should be allowed to grab, ingest and repurpose any data that’s available on the public Internet whether they own it or not, because they are “just learning like a human would.” Once a person reads an article, they can use the ideas they just absorbed in their speech or even their drawings for free.

    Iris van Rooj, a professor of computational cognitive science at Radboud University Nijmegen in The Netherlands, posits that it’s impossible to build a machine to reproduce human-style thinking by using even larger and more complex LLMs than we have today.

    NY Times Tech Columnist Farhad Manjoo made this point in a recent op-ed, positing that writers should not be compensated when their work is used for machine learning because the bots are merely drawing “inspiration” from the words like a person does.

    “When a machine is trained to understand language and culture by poring over a lot of stuff online, it is acting, philosophically at least, just like a human being who draws inspiration from existing works,” Manjoo wrote.

    In his testimony before a U.S. Senate subcommittee hearing this past July, Emory Law Professor Matthew Sag used the metaphor of a student learning to explain why he believes training on copyrighted material is usually fair use.

    In fact, Microsoft, which is a major investor in OpenAI and uses GPT-4 for its Bing Chat tools, released a paper in March claiming that GPT-4 has “sparks of Artificial General Intelligence” – the endpoint where the machine is able to learn any human task thanks to it having “emergent” abilities that weren’t in the original model.


    Saved 93% of original text.

  • Gamey@feddit.de
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    That’s a philosophical debate we can’t really answer and not a lie, the question is if we do anything other than copy. The without any doubt biggest elephant in the room is the fact that AIs don’t remember and iterate like we do yet but that’s probably just a matter of time, other than that the very different environment we learn in is another huge issue if you try to make any comparison. It’s a tricky question that we might never know the answe to but it’s also facinating to think about and I don’t think rejecting the idea alltogether is a especially good answer.