A little web app that searches the popular AI tools to see if you / your name is represented in the weights.
Hi, I’m Phil Nelson, a writer, developer, and audio-visual maker of stuff. I have been making stuff online for over 25 years. I run RetroStrange and Set Side B. Good to see you.
Blog Archives
A little web app that searches the popular AI tools to see if you / your name is represented in the weights.
Matthew Guariglia for the EFF DeepLinks blog:
Ring is rolling back many of the reforms it’s made in the last few years by easing police access to footage from millions of homes in the United States. This is a grave threat to civil liberties in the United States. After all, police have used Ring footage to spy on protestors, and obtained footage without a warrant or consent of the user. It is easy to imagine that law enforcement officials will use their renewed access to Ring information to find people who have had abortions or track down people for immigration enforcement.
Don’t use Ring. Don’t let your friends use Ring.
An independent investigation found that the same cart could be $10 more expensive based on vibes. As evacide mentioned on Mastodon, Instacart claims it is the stores fault, and the stores say Instacart sets the pricing. Such innovation! Way of the future.
Laura Cress for BBC News:
The 45-second advert was produced with generative AI clips and released publicly on McDonald’s Netherlands YouTube channel on 6 December.
Viewers on social media denounced the use of AI in the film, with one commenter calling it “the most god-awful ad I’ve seen this year”.
Way of the future.
Step into the shoes of a powerful VC who’s totally not having ANY doubts at all about their gigantic investment in generative AI.
Funny stuff. Source: Aftermath
A real “surprising nobody who has actually used it” moment in a sea of them for the AI industry:
[…] a group of reviewers blindly assessed the summaries produced by both humans and AI for coherency, length, ASIC references, regulation references and for identifying recommendations. They were unaware that this exercise involved AI at all.
These reviewers overwhelmingly found that the human summaries beat out their AI competitors on every criteria and on every submission, scoring an 81% on an internal rubric compared with the machine’s 47%.
Read: AI worse than humans in every way at summarising information
[All of the java components][link] that won [the contest][contest]. Watch the slow-mo video if you want to weep for humanity’s eventual end.
[link]: http://www.doc.ic.ac.uk/~rb1006/projects:marioai “Robins Pages! :: projects:marioai”
[contest]: http://julian.togelius.com/mariocompetition2009/index.php “Mario Competition 2009”
Incredible demo video from one of the entrants in the Super Mario AI competition. mentioned previously on Extra Future. See also: The project page, which explains the process behind the AI.
The developer says he’ll release the source code once the contest is over.