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What would it take to build AI ethically?
(lemmy.world)
"We did it, Patrick! We made a technological breakthrough!"
A place for all those who loathe AI to discuss things, post articles, and ridicule the AI hype. Proud supporter of working people. And proud booer of SXSW 2024.
AI, in this case, refers to LLMs, GPT technology, and anything listed as "AI" meant to increase market valuations.
I despise "AI" for quite a few reasons: It's built on theft, it empowers the fascists and oligarchs, its masters seek to dis-empower or replace human workers and creatives, its name is a deception as well as its primary use case, etc. This community doesn't need a rehash. I personally despise AI because I love the programming craft and I worry about a future where code is only generated, or worse: generated autonomously. Don't get me started on "AI first" companies. Fuck that.
"AI" is an anti-human technology.
Now, separate "AI" and all its awfulness from LLM as an algorithm/data structure. Can LLMs be ethical? I honestly don't know whether the good can be isolated from the bad. I started to brainstorm this out below, but the more I write, the less convinced I am that there's a middle way. I'm afraid that much of the perceived benefit of LLMs is derived from the universal theft of training data.
Dear reader, please consider the following a brainstorm only from a non-expert Anti who's trying in good faith to find a path.
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Here are some possible ethical use cases:
IMO, an ethical LLM solution might have attributes like these. Disclaimer: I'm not an expert so some of this may be nonsense ("brainstorm"):
I have high doubts that these qualities can be achieved due to complexity and cost. Such is the price of legitimacy.
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OK, that's all. I'm going back now to stewing in my disdain for "AI".
I don't agree summarization is an OK use case as a product. Maybe as a one off thing that a user explicitly requests of their own data within an office suite or whatever.
Meanwhile, I've been looking at the mincemeat "Google AI mode" makes of my essays, completely changing the meaning and giving people false conclusions which misrepresent my position. It's shockingly awful.
Yes, they cannot reason at all, despite clever marketing names like 'reasoning models'. A responsible operator must verify all output, something humans can't collectively be trusted to do. Even when verification is performed, we must ask ourselves if 'old-fashioned' thinking wouldn't have given a just as good or better result. IMO, it's hard to find anything positive about this technology.
Something related I've been thinking about: they're unable to produce truth or lies, only output.