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    AI Megathread

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved No Escape from Reality
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    • YamY
      Yam
      last edited by

      Just to summarize, and please correct me, Trashcan thinks that SOME amount of false positives (1%) using tools is acceptable in the fight against AI and Faraday thinks that ZERO amount of false positives using tools is acceptable in the fight against AI? Am I understanding that you think its better to trust your gut here, Faraday?

      FaradayF TrashcanT 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • PavelP
        Pavel @Faraday
        last edited by

        @Faraday said in AI Megathread:

        IMHO we need structural change.

        Agreed. It’s fundamentally not even really an “AI” problem at its core, but a sort of “humans relying on authorities instead of thinking” problem.

        He/Him. Opinions and views are solely my own unless specifically stated otherwise.
        BE AN ADULT

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • FaradayF
          Faraday @Yam
          last edited by

          @Yam That isn’t exactly what I said. It’s a complex issue requiring multiple lines of defense, better education, and structural change. But I am saying that even 99% accuracy is too low.

          For example, say you have a self-driving car. Are you OK if it gets into an accident 1 out of every 100 times you drive it?

          Say you have a facial recognition program that law enforcement leans heavily on. Are you OK if it mis-identifies 1 out of every 100 suspects?

          I’m not.

          1% failure doesn’t sound like much until you multiply it across millions of cases.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • TrashcanT
            Trashcan @Yam
            last edited by

            @Yam
            I think that some amount of mistakes in any system are acceptable. Nothing is flawless. To me the barrier that a system needs to clear is “better than any alternative”.

            In AI detectors, we’ve already seen that most of the time, people unassisted get it right only 50-60% of the time. Certain detectors are performing at level where less than 1% of results are false positive. That seems better.

            @Faraday said in AI Megathread:

            say you have a self-driving car. Are you OK if it gets into an accident 1 out of every 100 times you drive it?

            There were about 6 million auto accidents in 2022. If the self-driving car (extrapolated to the whole population) would have caused 5 million accidents, it would be better.

            @Faraday said in AI Megathread:

            Say you have a facial recognition program that law enforcement leans heavily on. Are you OK if it mis-identifies 1 out of every 100 suspects?

            If this facial recognition program does a better job than humans, yes I am okay with it. Humans are notoriously poor eye witnesses.

            Eyewitness misidentification has been a leading cause of wrongful convictions across the United States. It has played a role in 70% of the more than 375 wrongful convictions overturned by DNA evidence. In Indiana, 36% of wrongful convictions have involved mistaken eyewitness identification.

            @Pavel said in AI Megathread:

            but a sort of “humans relying on authorities instead of thinking” problem

            There are cases when humans should rely on authorities instead of thinking. No one is advocating for completely disconnecting your brain while making any judgment, but authoritative sources can and should play a key role in decision-making.

            he/him
            this machine kills fascists

            YamY JumpscareJ PavelP 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • YamY
              Yam @Trashcan
              last edited by

              @Trashcan said in AI Megathread:

              There were about 6 million auto accidents in 2022. If the self-driving car (extrapolated to the whole population) would have caused 5 million accidents, it would be better.

              Lol man, I have to agree. I realize that we’re generally anti-generative AI in art/writing here but I’ll be honest, if the computer drives the car better than my anxious ass, I’ll ride along.

              FaradayF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • JumpscareJ
                Jumpscare @Trashcan
                last edited by

                @Trashcan said in AI Megathread:

                There were about 6 million auto accidents in 2022. If the self-driving car (extrapolated to the whole population) would have caused 5 million accidents, it would be better.

                Making cities walkable would be far better than throwing more money into the abyss that cities become when they’re overrun by self-driving cars.

                Game-runner of Silent Heaven, a small-town horror MU.
                https://silentheaven.org

                N YamY TezT 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 5
                • FaradayF
                  Faraday @Yam
                  last edited by

                  @Yam said in AI Megathread:

                  if the computer drives the car better than my anxious ass, I’ll ride along.

                  That’s a big “if” though, and is the crux of my argument.

                  @Trashcan said in AI Megathread:

                  If this facial recognition program does a better job than humans, yes I am okay with it. Humans are notoriously poor eye witnesses.

                  The difference is that many people know that humans are notoriously poor eye witnesses. Many people trust machines more than they trust other humans, even when said machines are actually worse than the humans they’re replacing. That’s the psychological effect I’m referring to.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • N
                    NotSanni @Jumpscare
                    last edited by

                    @Jumpscare said in AI Megathread:

                    @Trashcan said in AI Megathread:

                    There were about 6 million auto accidents in 2022. If the self-driving car (extrapolated to the whole population) would have caused 5 million accidents, it would be better.

                    Making cities walkable would be far better than throwing more money into the abyss that cities become when they’re overrun by self-driving cars.

                    Unfortunately, tech bros would rather reinvent bandaid solutions over and over again instead of actually working to improving the future.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • YamY
                      Yam @Jumpscare
                      last edited by

                      @Jumpscare Walkable cities is a whole 'nother can of worms.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • TezT
                        Tez Administrators @Jumpscare
                        last edited by

                        @Jumpscare Totally, but don’t let the perfect be the enemy of good.

                        she/they

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • GashlycrumbG
                          Gashlycrumb @Trashcan
                          last edited by

                          @Trashcan It is part of ‘Turnitin’ which is pretty widely used. I have no idea if it’s one of the ones you’ve listed here, or which one if it is.

                          Part of what’s exasperating about it is that it doesn’t give me any clue as to why it is tagging segments as “likely AI generated” so even if I don’t spot some way that makes it seem likely that it’s wrong, what possible use is it?

                          It would be ironic to the point of grotesque in the context of a class where I spend the whole time saying, “Why do you believe that?” and “Prove it,” and “Where’s the evidence?” and “Does that research methodology work? Do you think the result mean what the reaseachers say it means? Did the newspaper report say it means what the researchers said it means?” and so on. After that I’m gonna roll up and say, “Hey, a computer program using semi-secret methodology to detect AI says you cheated, so did you?” to a student?

                          I get @Faraday’s comments about people trusting computers in a weird way, but I guess I don’t share that, because I feel like I may as well draw tarot cards and just say anybody who gets an inverted swords card cheated.

                          "This is Liberty Hall; you can spit on the mat and call the cat a bastard!"
                          – A. Bertram Chandler

                          somasatoriS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                          • somasatoriS
                            somasatori @Gashlycrumb
                            last edited by

                            @Gashlycrumb how did you know about the method I used to grade papers when I was a TA?

                            "And the Fool says, pointing to the invertebrate fauna feeding in the graves: 'Here a monarchy reigns, mightier than you: His Majesty the Worm.'"
                            Italo Calvino, The Castle of Crossed Destines

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • PavelP
                              Pavel @Trashcan
                              last edited by

                              @Trashcan said in AI Megathread:

                              No one is advocating for completely disconnecting your brain while making any judgment

                              I know that. You know that. But people are idiots and well entirely defer to an authority. Education is always ten years behind technology, and laws are fifteen years behind that.

                              He/Him. Opinions and views are solely my own unless specifically stated otherwise.
                              BE AN ADULT

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