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2 yr. ago

  • Grayjay has been useful for that. I still follow people on YouTube, but if they setup a channel anywhere else I can switch my feed to draw from those sources instead.

  • Requiring solar is good for certain regions, but it might be better to make this more generic for any renewables especially because there are areas that don't get a lot of sun.

    For instance, California requires all newly constructed homes to have solar installed, but that wouldn't work too well for places that are mostly cloudy throughout the year, or for places like Alaska.

  • The problem with Lemmy is that deleted posts will nuke all of the comments as well.

    At least with Reddit, even if the post was deleted you could still get the answer by going through the comments.

  • In case anyone else is curious:

    Why is Chrome taking action?

    Certification Authorities (CAs) serve a privileged and trusted role on the Internet that underpin encrypted connections between browsers and websites. With this tremendous responsibility comes an expectation of adhering to reasonable and consensus-driven security and compliance expectations, including those defined by the CA/Browser TLS Baseline Requirements.

    Over the past six years, we have observed a pattern of compliance failures, unmet improvement commitments, and the absence of tangible, measurable progress in response to publicly disclosed incident reports. When these factors are considered in aggregate and considered against the inherent risk each publicly-trusted CA poses to the Internet ecosystem, it is our opinion that Chrome’s continued trust in Entrust is no longer justified.

  • If you live in El Salvador you can pay your taxes in bitcoin... that makes it a "real currency" according to your test.

  • I would much rather users on here not manipulate titles to make it sound worse than what the actual article is claiming. It's intentionally misleading.

  • There's more to "AI" than just ChatGPT...

    I think you're mixing up what AI actually means here, you would probably like this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nGIpdiQrFDU

    But in brief, what about DLSS? The ML models for that get improved with every driver update.

    STT models like whisper that are great at transcribing/translating.

    Object recognition models for drones to keep the camera centered on you and for object avoidance.

    ML models for finding new cures.

    Models in astronomy for finding planets... Etc.

    You're trying to tell me that everything "AI" is trash and not getting better?

  • I was just about to post about this on here. Glad someone else beat me to it.

    The video in that post links back directly to an mp4 file like so: https://gvid.tv/v/UR5kgL1P.mp4

  • Great catch

    Jump
  • I thought the same for a second, but it does link to this: https://gvid.tv/v/UR5kgL1P.mp4

    My Lemmy app (Voyager) just doesn't support linking to a video like this apparently.

  • If it's hard to post images on Lemmy... Maybe use a better app?

    Voyager works really well for this. I'm most others should work as well.

  • I don't think you realize just how widely used some of those other models are... For instance, in gaming, DLSS is supported with every Nvidia GPU starting with the 20 series and up.

    DLSS uses multiple machine learning models for things like predicting object/pixel movement, generating new frames between what you would normally be able to achieve, and then upscaling that image. Which is also why you want to download the latest drivers since those models are better trained for the more recently released games.

    I wouldn't call that a "small fraction" by any means.

    But, maybe your referring to the amount of focus that the news has on LLMs like ChatGPT?

  • Looks like it was trying to make her look like a turkey πŸ¦ƒ.

  • What about DLSS? What about machine learning for identifying new planets? ML Models for discovering new medicines? Object avoidance for drones? Transcribing and translating different languages?

    AI is way bigger than just some Large Language Models.

  • I would counter that there are many good use cases that go beyond the scope of what was mentioned in the video (his concerns are absolutely legitimate).

    For example:
    Nvidia's DLSS for gamers. This provides a decent boost to FPS while maintaining a good quality picture. They use multiple models such as motion prediction, interpreting between the frames what the image should look like, and upscaling. These models are (most likely) trained on the video games themselves which is why you want to get the latest driver updates because they include updates to those models. And, yes, the upscaling and interpolation models here are generative models as they are filling in frames with new pictures with details that aren't there from the source, and then enlarging the picture and filling in details in a way that traditional means of upscaling cannot.

    Brainstorming/writer's block:
    For generative text models, I think these have to be used carefully, and treated as if they're interns that have a knowledge in a very broad range of subjects. They're great for brainstorming ideas and for writer's block, but their output needs to be verified for accuracy and the output shouldn't be trusted or used directly in most cases.

    Entertainment:
    They're also excellent for entertainment purposes, for example, check out this GLaDOS project:
    https://old.reddit.com/r/LocalLLaMA/comments/1csnexs/local_glados_now_running_on_windows_11_rtx_2060/
    Which is combining a generative text (LLM) model with a generative audio (text to speech) model as well as a few other models.

    Green screen tools:
    We could use the sodium vapor process to create training material for a model that can quickly and accurately handle processing green screens for video production:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UQuIVsNzqDk

    Creating avatars for user accounts on websites.

    Creating interesting QR codes that actually work:

    https://civitai.com/models/111006/qr-code-monster

    So, in the end, I think that there are some incredible uses for generative AI that go beyond just "creating garbage fast", that don't cause problems in the way that this video is describing (and those problems he describes are definitely valid).

  • He goes into the details of the most upvoted Google Gemini fails and then branches out to how text/image/audio generative AI is being used on Facebook, Instagram to inflate traffic, as well as how you can actually earn some income by farming reactions on twitter now (with the blue checkmark).

    There's a section on how adobe is selling AI generated images with their stock photos, but you can tell this video might be a little rushed because he comes to the conclusion that people are paying $80 for one of these images, when in reality the $80 adobe plan gives you 40 images (so about $2 per stock image). That or he knows this statement is misleading, but makes it anyway because it will drive his own reactions up (oh the irony). https://web.archive.org/web/20240701131247/https://stock.adobe.com/plans

    Link to timestamp in video:
    https://youtu.be/UShsgCOzER4&t=894s

    With adobe he touches on their updated ToS that state how any images uploaded to Adobe can be used to train their own generative image model.

    The Netflix section talks about the "What Jennifer Did" documentary which used AI generated images and passed them off as real (or at least didn't mention that the images were fake).

    Spotify: How audio generative AI is being used to create music and is being published on there now as well as their failed

    Edit: as well as their failed "projects/features" (car accessory, exclusive podcasts, etc.)

    Multiple times throughout the video he pushes the theory that most of these companies are also using AI generated content to drive engagement on their own site (or to earn income without needing to pay any artists).

    He definitely focuses only on the worst ways that generative AI can be used without touching on any realistic takes from the other side (just the extreme takes from the other side with statements like "AI music will replace the soulless crappy music that's being released now... and it will be better and have more soul!").

    Still worth a watch, he brings up a ton of valid points about the market being oversaturated with AI generated products.

  • I don't think you can add any extra text when crossposting with Lemmy, but I'm not sure what instances like kbin allow.

    Either way, I would expect that treating it the same way that the browser view currently does would be a good start for this specific case.