Assassinating is so easy a child could do it. It’s getting away with it that’s hard.
Assassinating is so easy a child could do it. It’s getting away with it that’s hard.
Yes, and we’re in denial about it.
No mysteries left to ponder, just unending obligatory supplication. What bliss!
Every time I hear someone talking up prompt engineering, I feel like I should say something. But I don’t.
Thank you for your cooperation.
I like that someone in a position of authority is talking about this.
The examined life with all its critical thinking and guarding against bias is hard. The dark side is easier.
And I don’t mean to denigrate data science. It is important and powerful. And real machine intelligence may one day emerge from it (or data science may one day point the way). But data science just isn’t AI.
This is because the AI of today is a shit sandwich that we’re being told is peanut butter and jelly.
For those who like to party: All the current “AI” technologies use statistics to approximate semantics. They can’t just be semantic, because we don’t know how meaning works or what gives rise to it. So the public is put off because they have an intuitive sense of the ruse.
As long as the mechanics of meaning remain a mystery, “AI” will be parlor tricks.
No one knows, but for sure the reason is something rotten. I’ve never ever heard a reasonable argument against it.
So I take it that you interpret “no stupid questions” to mean “don’t post stupid questions.” The way I interpret it is “there’s no such thing as a stupid question.”
The sidebar says “No such thing. Ask away!” So I think the idea is that people should feel free to ask any question assuming they really want an answer. However, joke or troll questions (and I don’t think this is either one), are allowed on Fridays.
I’m going to need to see your passport to prove you’re not American. Otherwise fines may be assessed.
I would be interested in learning what people find objectionable about my comments, if anyone would care to share.
Yes the developer sees it, and also the data brokers they sell all their user data to see it, aggregate it, and corollate it. Not to mention whatever Microsoft does with it.
My main point is that “observability” tools like Clarity are screen grabbing whole Web sessions and have been for some time.
This has already been happening on the Web for quite some time. For example Microsoft Clarity records everything you do on those dodgy Web sites you visit. And they assign a universal identifier to you that can be correlated with the IDs Google and your device have already created and broadcast to profile you.
And you think “oh but I use x, y, and z to prevent tracking”. Guess what: They make your browser do nonsense tasks in the background to benchmark your hardware and then assign a UUID to you based on that.
The only thing that can help this situation is privacy legislation with real teeth.
It’s from 1944.