this may be slightly optimistic, but it is true that fewer players tends to make it easier to reach consensus on compliance standards. It's not clear what the regulatory body would be (OECD and G20 are both mentioned in the article as having made statements around AI. Given the comparative success of GDPR regulation by the EU beyond the borders of the EU, it may be that a non-global body will end up setting the de facto standards for AI production, data management and use.
it's not clear that it's enforceable in practice, or even what it's supposed to mean for that matter, but the GDPR already appears to attempt to constrain "AI": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right_to_explanation#European_Union
― đ đđ˘đ¨ (caek), Friday, 17 January 2020 07:14 (six years ago)
warning: no one involved in the making of this article knew how to use quotation marks
Airbnb has developed technology that looks at guestsâ online âpersonalitiesâ when they book a break to calculate the risk of them trashing a hostâs home.Details have emerged of its âtrait analyserâ software built to scour the web to assess usersâ âtrustworthiness and compatibilityâ as well as their âbehavioural and personality traitsâ in a bid to forecast suitability to rent a property. ...The background check technology was revealed in a patent published by the European Patent Office after being granted in the US last year.According to the patent, Airbnb could deploy its software to scan sites including social media for traits such as âconscientiousness and opennessâ against the usual credit and identity checks and what it describes as âsecure third-party databasesâ. Traits such as âneuroticism and involvement in crimesâ and ânarcissism, Machiavellianism, or psychopathyâ are âperceived as untrustworthyâ.It uses artificial intelligence to mark down those found to be âassociatedâ with fake social network profiles, or those who have given any false details. The patent also suggests users are scored poorly if keywords, images or video associated with them are involved with drugs or alcohol, hate websites or organisations, or sex work.It adds that people âinvolved in pornographyâ or who have âauthored online content with negative languageâ will be marked down.The machine learning also scans news stories that could be about the person, such as an article related to a crime, and can âweightâ the seriousness of offences. Postings to blogs and news websites are also taken into account to form a âperson graphâ, the patent says.This combined data analyses how the customer acts towards others offline, along with cross-referencing metrics including âsocial connectionsâ, employment and education history.The machine learning then calculates the âcompatibilityâ of host and guest.
Details have emerged of its âtrait analyserâ software built to scour the web to assess usersâ âtrustworthiness and compatibilityâ as well as their âbehavioural and personality traitsâ in a bid to forecast suitability to rent a property.
...The background check technology was revealed in a patent published by the European Patent Office after being granted in the US last year.
According to the patent, Airbnb could deploy its software to scan sites including social media for traits such as âconscientiousness and opennessâ against the usual credit and identity checks and what it describes as âsecure third-party databasesâ. Traits such as âneuroticism and involvement in crimesâ and ânarcissism, Machiavellianism, or psychopathyâ are âperceived as untrustworthyâ.
It uses artificial intelligence to mark down those found to be âassociatedâ with fake social network profiles, or those who have given any false details. The patent also suggests users are scored poorly if keywords, images or video associated with them are involved with drugs or alcohol, hate websites or organisations, or sex work.
It adds that people âinvolved in pornographyâ or who have âauthored online content with negative languageâ will be marked down.
The machine learning also scans news stories that could be about the person, such as an article related to a crime, and can âweightâ the seriousness of offences. Postings to blogs and news websites are also taken into account to form a âperson graphâ, the patent says.
This combined data analyses how the customer acts towards others offline, along with cross-referencing metrics including âsocial connectionsâ, employment and education history.
The machine learning then calculates the âcompatibilityâ of host and guest.
https://www.standard.co.uk/tech/airbnb-software-scan-online-life-suitable-guest-a4325551.html
― But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!đ (Karl Malone), Saturday, 18 January 2020 01:42 (six years ago)
So, if someone else having my name commits a crime 1800 miles from my place of residence and it is written up in The Podunk Telegraph and Weekly Shopper, does this software assign that crime to me or ignore it?
I like the old model, where people who choose to offer services to the public must allow the public to pay for and use those services.
― A is for (Aimless), Saturday, 18 January 2020 04:40 (six years ago)
WHAT HAS OCCURRED CANNOT BE UNDONEI have trained a neural net on a crowdsourced set of vintage jello-centric recipesI believe this to possibly be the worst recipe-generating algorithm in existence pic.twitter.com/cwQwOpUNDv— Janelle Shane (@JanelleCShane) February 7, 2020
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Friday, 7 February 2020 19:57 (six years ago)
(h/t Ned)
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Friday, 7 February 2020 19:58 (six years ago)
Also, in case these recipes are making you thirsty: https://aiweirdness.com/post/189979379637/dont-let-an-ai-even-an-advanced-one-make-you-a
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Friday, 7 February 2020 20:07 (six years ago)
Eat, drink and be merry, for tomorrow you'll definitely be dead.
― Ned Raggett, Friday, 7 February 2020 20:22 (six years ago)
brb removing all internal rinds
― seandalai, Saturday, 8 February 2020 02:24 (six years ago)
AI Travis Scott is lithttps://vimeo.com/384062745
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Wednesday, 19 February 2020 13:43 (six years ago)
Scrolling through that twitter thread, pretty sure I just made an office spectacle of myself when I got to the recipe entitled 'Potty Training for a Bunny'.
― Sammo Hazuki's Tago Mago Cantina (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 19 February 2020 13:49 (six years ago)
I don't know how I've failed to learn by now that I CAN NOT read these AI threads while I'm at work.
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/EQMrV37U8AAmGDG.jpg
― Sammo Hazuki's Tago Mago Cantina (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 19 February 2020 13:51 (six years ago)
It's incredible
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Wednesday, 19 February 2020 14:21 (six years ago)
oh my, I just got to the fanfic:
The neural net read a LOT of fanfic on the internet during its initial general training, and still remembers it even after training on the jello-centric data.Except now all its stories center around food. pic.twitter.com/WcMahhzc0j— Janelle Shane (@JanelleCShane) February 8, 2020
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Wednesday, 19 February 2020 14:24 (six years ago)
I think we need to call the police
Today's AI is much closer in brainpower to an earthworm than to a human. It can pattern-match but doesn't understand what it's doing.This is its attempt to blend in with human recipes pic.twitter.com/kYnL7kT48B— Janelle Shane (@JanelleCShane) February 8, 2020
― totally unnecessary bewbz of exploitation (DJP), Wednesday, 19 February 2020 14:25 (six years ago)
This is pretty cool: https://www.theguardian.com/society/2020/feb/20/antibiotic-that-kills-drug-resistant-bacteria-discovered-through-ai
― DJI, Thursday, 20 February 2020 21:08 (six years ago)
that is amazing
― Li'l Brexit (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 20 February 2020 21:45 (six years ago)
This is huge.The creator of the YOLO algorithms, which (along with SSD) set much of the path of modern object detection, has stopped doing any computer vision research due to ethical concerns.I've never seen anything quite like this before. https://t.co/jzu1p4my5V— Jeremy Howard (@jeremyphoward) February 20, 2020
― But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!đ (Karl Malone), Friday, 21 February 2020 17:23 (six years ago)
(i have no insight on anything at all whether "anything like quite like this" has happened before - i suspect that many people in the field have given up their research due to ethical concerns)
― But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!đ (Karl Malone), Friday, 21 February 2020 17:25 (six years ago)
quote "anything like quite like this" end quote
if jeremy howard says this specific case is a big deal then i believe him.
but this happened a fair amount in the 60s and 70s throughout science and technology (including CS).
and less prominently, i know tons of people working in ML who vocally refuse to work on vision (which is perhaps the most obviously dangerous application). many of us also refuse to do anything in ad tech, i.e. surveillance and fraud. they didn't work on this stuff for decades (thanks joe!) and then publicly recant though, so they're not box office like he is.
― đ đđ˘đ¨ (caek), Sunday, 23 February 2020 05:43 (six years ago)
e.g.
If you're wondering why you'd never heard of him, it's because he stood up at the ACM Silver Anniversary party and gave a seven minute keynote about how military-industrial complicit computing folk sucked and should quit. Grace Hopper walked out; he ended up blackballed. pic.twitter.com/xjdvLXtuZ8— Os Keyes (@farbandish) February 9, 2019
(also albert einstein)
― đ đđ˘đ¨ (caek), Sunday, 23 February 2020 05:48 (six years ago)
https://github.com/elsamuko/Shirt-without-Stripes
― lukas, Monday, 20 April 2020 18:35 (six years ago)
shirts without boolean operators
― Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Monday, 20 April 2020 18:37 (six years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iJgNpm8cTE8
― DJI, Wednesday, 6 May 2020 02:58 (six years ago)
Once it deviated from the original my brain just sort of dipped out. There are so many uncanny valleys.
― El Tomboto, Wednesday, 6 May 2020 04:07 (six years ago)
GPT-3 is pretty crazy! https://arxiv.org/abs/2005.14165
I certainly don't understand most of what's going on in the paper, but it seems that GPT-3 is basically the same as the now-famous GPT-2 language model, but massively scaled up (up to 175 Billion features). Apparently this enables the model to perform much better on "one shot" or "few shot" learning across a wide variety of tasks. That means learning to perform a task after only a few demonstrations, the way a human would, rather than the hundreds or thousands of demonstrations that had previously been required.
In addition to things like trivia questions, translation, and reading comprehension, it's shown to do a pretty good job at arithmetic (from a language model that hadn't specifically been taught to do math!), and can write news articles that are almost indistinguishable from human-written articles (human raters have a very hard time telling the difference). Be sure to check out the generated poetry in the appendix (written in the style of Wallace Stevens), which are imo pretty impressive.
― Dan I., Tuesday, 2 June 2020 21:42 (six years ago)
parameters, not features, sorry
― Dan I., Tuesday, 2 June 2020 21:43 (six years ago)
Important to point out that on most tasks, "one shot" or "few shot" learning still results in substantially lower accuracy than extensively-trained task-specific state-of-the-art results, but this style of lightly-trained learning had been (from what I can gather) a notorious weak point of models like this up until now, so it's a big step up.
― Dan I., Tuesday, 2 June 2020 21:50 (six years ago)
v cool
― DJI, Tuesday, 2 June 2020 21:50 (six years ago)
can't do much worse than we are right now
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Tuesday, 2 June 2020 21:54 (six years ago)
Get ready for people to start moving the Turing test goalposts: https://aiweirdness.com/post/620645957819875328/this-is-the-openai-api-it-makes-spookily-good
― Dan I., Thursday, 11 June 2020 18:39 (six years ago)
fucking hellhttps://twitter.com/dog_fakes
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Thursday, 11 June 2020 19:00 (six years ago)
This is Soren. He is having an existential crisis, wondering if maybe he isnât just a lamb after all. 14/10 pic.twitter.com/OHf7kFfQvj— dog_fakes (@dog_fakes) June 10, 2020
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Thursday, 11 June 2020 19:01 (six years ago)
We only rate dogs. There is a broken pipe in the basement. Please donât send Cheetos. This is a fire hazard. Thank you... 13/10 pic.twitter.com/JqA2yRGcJj— dog_fakes (@dog_fakes) June 11, 2020
i am deeply curious if the alt-text is human or machine generated
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Thursday, 11 June 2020 19:02 (six years ago)
Check Dan's link. The text is AI generated based on the images.
― brain (krakow), Thursday, 11 June 2020 22:49 (six years ago)
Ah, sorry, alt-text. Ignore my not reading properly. Apologies.
― brain (krakow), Thursday, 11 June 2020 22:50 (six years ago)
The picture texts are human written. I was mostly just impressed with the chatbot snippets from the link I posted, though Iâm not sure I really trust the author not to have cherry picked or âcleaned them upâ. The generated dog pictures are not special and have been possible for years I think.
― Dan I., Friday, 12 June 2020 02:35 (five years ago)
The generated dog pictures are amusingly grotesque. Humans like to be amused. Therefore the dog pictures serve their highest and best purpose, which is not to pinpoint the precise attainments of AI dog picture generation in June 2020 or educate people as to how long it might be before AI can generate wholly believable pictures of non-existent dogs. That sort of evaluation is better made via papers published in academic journals than on a Twitter feed.
― A is for (Aimless), Friday, 12 June 2020 03:38 (five years ago)
are u sure?
― Yanni Xenakis (Hadrian VIII), Friday, 12 June 2020 04:03 (five years ago)
Neither the text or the images are believably âhumanâ to me, though the text falls into a sort of prose uncanny valley while the pictures are all just deeply fucked up
― El Tomboto, Friday, 12 June 2020 04:22 (five years ago)
i'm pretty sure the text was AI-written (and many of you didn't notice, heh!)
― our god is a might god (Karl Malone), Friday, 12 June 2020 04:59 (five years ago)
in fact, the entire post dan l posted was all about the text of those tweets - the AI generated visuals barely warrant a mention
― our god is a might god (Karl Malone), Friday, 12 June 2020 05:01 (five years ago)
Dan I, sorry!
My bad, the dog ratings text is generated, but the alt-text (which I do not see and do not know how to view) is human written. She doesn't really do a good job of explaining all that, tbh. It'll be fun to play with the API first-hand.
― Dan I., Friday, 12 June 2020 14:35 (five years ago)
and with that, i believe that AI has now reached 100% level
we are now in the age of 3fa23
― our god is a wee lil god (Karl Malone), Friday, 12 June 2020 15:05 (five years ago)
hold your cursor motionless over the image for the alt text. I would've been more impressed if that was machine-written as it seems genuinely aware.
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 12 June 2020 16:14 (five years ago)
yikeshttp://www.shardcore.org/shardpress2019/2020/06/17/algonuts/
― Fuck the NRA (ulysses), Friday, 19 June 2020 23:56 (five years ago)
face depixelizer
đ¤đ¤đ¤ pic.twitter.com/LG2cimkCFm— Chicken3gg (@Chicken3gg) June 20, 2020
― koogs, Saturday, 20 June 2020 18:45 (five years ago)
One reason this thread title is correct is that so many AI researchers fervently believe in long-discredited pseudoscience: https://cacm.acm.org/careers/244713-facial-recognition-software-predicts-criminality-researchers-say/fulltext
― dip to dup (rob), Monday, 22 June 2020 17:35 (five years ago)