jesse_the_k: USB jump drive pointing into my left ear (JK data in ear)

...here's an excellent use-case: feed your strong passphrase text as a prompt to an image generator

from the passphrase string "fabulous tattoo Harvey", Reddit user u/waydomatic and ChatGPT made this cheerful example )

The LLM thinks Harvey is a muscular white guy wearing a skimpy purple Speedo; arms, shoulder and upper chest covered in rose tattoos. He flexes his right arm and flashes a big white smile under his handlebar mustache. Of course he's wearing a rose crown.

Saving the generated image would certainly be more secure than writing down the password.

jesse_the_k: Robot dog from original Doctor Who (k9 to the rescue)

from someone who's a realist-for-now yet also wants to believe.

Adam Engst on Can Agentic Web Browsers Count?

tl;dr No, given a readily available data set on a webpage, they can't.

The sweetest and scariest part was his sympathy for Copilot's very anxious inner monologue as it tried to come up with answers while working to a deadline that nobody had created.

When it comes to system prompts, the anxious tone of Copilot’s internal responses suggests a “ship now, apologize later, if you’re caught” system prompt that, if reflected in a real-world workplace, would be problematic. Obviously, AIs don’t have feelings that can be hurt and won’t complain to HR, but such a culture tends to encourage people to cut corners and make poor decisions that compromise quality and customer service. If Copilot is any indication, the same is true for AIs.

jesse_the_k: person wearing dress, head inside a box, that text scrawled on outside (thinking inside the box)

The American Foundation for the Blind is researching AI:

details on how to participate )

In addition to the environmental and ethical violations which LLMs/AIs depend on, the endless hype and inaccurate performance make me shudder and growl. Yet I admit I’ve used neural text-to-speech voices for casual audio reading. The neural voices require an internet connection and they lose intelligibility at speed. They’re best as substitutes for human readers.

Blind computer users set their on-device system text-to-speech (TTS) at high speeds. Three hundred to five hundred words per minute are often cited. For screen reader applications, a robotic voice is a feature, enabling bits to flow from device to brain with minimal interpretation.

Neural voices produce much higher quality than system-level TTS. When fed appropriately coded input, they can laugh, whisper, and sound sarcastic as well as "analyze" an essay to produce a "podcast" dialog between two synthetic discussants. Some samples here: https://www.naturalreaders.com/online/

But I know well the expertise that skilled human narrators bring to their work—whether it’s commercial audiobook production, volunteer alternative-format creation, or podfic elves making magic. I don’t want a world where those jobs are outsourced to computers.

On the gripping hand, I remember when skilled Linotype operators--many Deaf--were obviated by computerized systems where reporters keyed their own copy. I used the bridge technology of phototypesetting, as well as pioneering desktop publishing. It's expected that admin workers now create flyers and graphs and charts.

Have you tried neural voices? Recognized them on YouTube or TikTok or your recent tech support call? Do you have thoughts for or against?

jesse_the_k: Robot dog from original Doctor Who (k9 to the rescue)

I just listened to a This American Life episode (audio or transcript) where David Kestenbaum, an experienced science journalist, kvelled about how awesome Chat GPT is, how they are truly approaching AGI—artificial general intelligence. His turning point was that the large language model was trained on text, and wrote its own graphic-generating program when prompted to show an image. And that's pretty cool, but ...

I asked ChatGPT-4o some super-basic questions about my family history, all documented in US Census data. The results were stunningly bad.

My maternal grandfather's cousin was Richard Neutra, who was a well-known modern architect. ChatGPT-4o insisted that everyone in my family was related to him--that my maternal grandmother was really married to him. It would show accurate 1940 Census data—-my maternal grandmother with her actual name and and then say, but no, my grandmother was actually married to famous person and my mother was his daughter.

It answered an identical census question incorrectly and then correctly in immediate succession.

As [personal profile] erinptah has been diligently documenting, "AI" is simply not there yet, although this hasn't prevented everybody and their dog claiming it as the absolute new hotness.

Verbatim Q&A inside )


I acknowledge that I have no technical qualifications to assess the relevance of these hallucinated answers to the overall reliability of "AI". I welcome new knowledge!

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