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    AI PBs

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Game Gab
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    • PavelP
      Pavel @Faraday
      last edited by

      @Faraday said in AI PBs:

      Maybe enough to fool a layperson, but not enough to actually BE competent.

      Hey, I’ve been doing that the hard way for years. People need to stop faking faking and fake skill authentically.

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

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • FaradayF
        Faraday @ProperPenguin
        last edited by Faraday

        @ProperPenguin said in AI PBs:

        When I told a few dev friends this, they got surprised and then tested on other instances (not just ChatGPT) and found yeah, it spits out a whole mess or sometimes it suddenly veers into turning your request into Python or similar.

        Knowing how these things work, it is not at all surprising that they are bad at generating a custom regex. If you want a well-known one, maybe, but GenAI doesn’t truly think or reason. It generates statistically likely responses. Not correct ones.

        But vetting regex-es is as hard as writing them, so you’re still not getting out ahead.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • D
          dvoraen
          last edited by

          I don’t have much to contribute here other than a serious amount of sardonic snark, so I’m just going to summarize the major points here with a metaphor:

          Generative “AI” (note the quotes) is like makeup. It can make things pretty, but unless you’re a skilled makeup artist or have a lot of experience with putting on your own cosmetics, there’s probably going to be flaws and eventually other people are going to notice and compare notes.

          Also, sooner or later the makeup has to be removed. We’ll leave that part open to interpretation; there’s many.

          (This metaphor also assumes the components of the makeup aren’t toxic, too!)

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • D
            dvoraen
            last edited by

            This is a non-sequitur to “AI” PBs, but it feels so adjacent to the discussion (it overlaps it slightly) that I have to share it.

            This is for the programmers out there, especially @Faraday.

            https://youtu.be/CUfliPTbJu4

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

              @dvoraen Heh I enjoyed that video, thanks.

              That reminds me of this post: My new hobby: watching AI slowly drive Microsoft employees insane. It’s reactions to a series of Pull Requests (the programmer equivalent of “Hey, I did a thing, someone check it out please and make sure I didn’t mess up”) from Copilot AI. The top comment says it all:

              I just looked at that first PR and I don’t know how you could trust any of it at some point. No real understanding of what it’s doing, it’s just guessing. So many errors, over and over again.

              Can AI tools make coding easier? Sure. Just in my lifetime I’ve seen code go from assembly language (low-level instructions to the computer registers) to visual coding tools (like Scratch) that let my kid build a game like Frogger. But even with that astonishing advancement, we still need developers to figure out what to build in the first place, and then make sure what gets built does what the customer needs. AI is highly unlikely to replace that in the forseeable future.

              In other news: AI industry horrified to face largest copyright class action ever certified

              They’ve warned that a single lawsuit raised by three authors over Anthropic’s AI training now threatens to “financially ruin” the entire AI industry if up to 7 million claimants end up joining the litigation and forcing a settlement.

              I know it’s unlikely to succeed, but one can dream.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • HobbieH
                Hobbie
                last edited by

                Here’s the “Fighting against AI in SRE” update for the past week.

                • Experienced developer raised a PR for our IaC that was full of AI slop, which he only admitted to when pressed, and expected it waved through.
                • Stumbled across Claude (free version) configuration in a very proprietary repo.
                • C-level keeps setting up meetings every two weeks asking how we get AI in our product, unsatisfied with “it breaches GDPR so we don’t” as an answer.
                • Got sent this painful little article which caused war flashbacks to my desktop support days: https://thenewstack.io/vibe-coding-the-shadow-it-problem-no-one-saw-coming/
                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                • MisterBoringM
                  MisterBoring
                  last edited by

                  This is an example of what I am hopeful AI will eventually do, which is help push scientific discovery forward.

                  https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgr94xxye2lo

                  Proud Member of the Pro-Mummy Alliance

                  FaradayF 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • FaradayF
                    Faraday @MisterBoring
                    last edited by

                    @MisterBoring said in AI PBs:

                    This is an example of what I am hopeful AI will eventually do, which is help push scientific discovery forward.

                    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cgr94xxye2lo

                    That is neat, though it’s worth noting that this doesn’t appear to be “Generative AI” in the usual sense of ChatGPT, etc., but a custom-trained model. With much of this, it’s not the technology itself that is the problem, it’s the way in which it’s being trained and used that people take issue with.

                    MisterBoringM 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                    • MisterBoringM
                      MisterBoring @Faraday
                      last edited by

                      @Faraday Totally. I feel like there’s just as many groups building AI models trained solely on academic works and scientific knowledge, but those groups aren’t getting any sort of news coverage because it’s not as controversial.

                      Proud Member of the Pro-Mummy Alliance

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • J
                        Juniper
                        last edited by

                        As per usual, capitalism makes things 1000% worse.

                        I don’t mind that humanity has unlocked the ability to generate human-like text in response to a prompt, but I DO mind that LLMs are now hooked to millions of bot accounts designed to propagandise the social media landscape.

                        I don’t mind that we have the ability to sort samples of text into broad categories, but I do mind that it’s being used to screen for abusive content without a human in the loop I can appeal to when blatantly bigoted speech slips through the cracks.

                        I don’t mind that people have the ability to generate images for personal use, but I do mind the interminable pile of slop other people have generated filling up online spaces I used to visit for real, human-created content.

                        Sadly because We Live In A Society it’s pretty much impossible to separate the existence of technology from the way it is being used, and there is nothing to do about it but opt out as much as possible and complain loudly that Microsoft ever thought a new AI-lead operating system was a good idea.

                        PavelP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
                        • PavelP
                          Pavel @Juniper
                          last edited by

                          @Juniper said in AI PBs:

                          it’s pretty much impossible to separate the existence of technology from the way it is being used

                          This is absolutely something I think (or at least hope) that many of these techthusiasts just don’t get. They’re up to their elbows in snizbangs per faloop and productivity metrics per powerpoint presentation that they don’t see reality.

                          It could be used for X, Y, and Z thing! But it’s not, it’s being used to regurgitate a kindergartener’s view of Shakespeare a thousand times a second or fifteen billion pictures of a flower that somehow has too many and not enough petals at the same time.

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

                          J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • J
                            Juniper @Pavel
                            last edited by

                            @Pavel said in AI PBs:

                            This is absolutely something I think (or at least hope) that many of these techthusiasts just don’t get. They’re up to their elbows in snizbangs per faloop and productivity metrics per powerpoint presentation that they don’t see reality.

                            See also: splitting the atom, letting every idiot have a handgun

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