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Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? |
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 18 Jan 26 - 06:11 AM Bingo: the RISKS Digest site at Newcastle is back up to date again. Herewith two consecutive articles from RISKS 34:83: Capability Maturity Models and generative artificial intelligence (see above) The AI boom is based on a fundamental mistake (The Verge)
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: Sandra in Sydney Date: 22 Jan 26 - 02:06 AM well, you do get pretty pictures!!! Tour website's AI sends visitors to Tasmanian sites that do not exist An AI-generated article on a travel booking website has sent tourists to a remote location in Tasmania's north-east, looking for hot springs that do not exist. Australian Tours and Cruises has admitted the AI technology it uses to create content and articles to help drive bookings has "completely messed up". What's next? The company has said it will review all of its AI-generated content, which is produced by a third party ... Mr Hennessy said that while all posts were normally reviewed before being posted, some had been made public by mistake while he was out of the country ... |
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: Donuel Date: 22 Jan 26 - 06:05 AM What's next? people might work. |
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: MaJoC the Filk Date: 23 Jan 26 - 10:03 AM > well, you do get pretty pictures!!! As it happens, Sandra, I saw an article some years ago about automated uglification using machine learning: teach the ML on pictures from one or more of the horror mags, then get them to "enhance" real-life photos to re-render them in that style. The most horrifying bit was that it was easy to tell that the image of a female English politician (Theresa May?) was processed this way, but that I found it difficult to tell that the one of Agent Orange wasn't the original. |
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: Stilly River Sage Date: 30 Jan 26 - 12:44 PM This interesting essay by James O'Sullivan was shared by an academic friend who writes about AI in the classroom. I am so f**king sick of AI slop Extracted from it: What is alarming, however, is the sheer willingness of people to put their own names to any old slop the machine produces. And further down: The internet was, in its most idealistic (and yes, maybe naive) conception, a sprawling parlour for human conversation and the exchange of genuine thought. That vision is effectively dead. Open LinkedIn or Reddit (or X, if you really want to wind yourself up) and you will see streams of the same beige, hallucinatory text bearing the chirpy, predictive cadence of ChatGPT, generated by users who could not be bothered to read the content they are putting their name to. They enter a prompt and paste the result, engaging in a pantomime of interaction that benefits no one but the platform’s engagement metrics. It is a hall of mirrors where machines talk to machines while humans look on, increasingly alienated from the very networks built to connect them. He concludes "I can appreciate the technology for what it is, but I am finding it increasingly difficult to forgive the laziness of the people using it." Amen. |
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: Donuel Date: 30 Jan 26 - 05:39 PM The slop will still have better spelling than the flesh-and-blood moron activists. A minor point, but I just saw a Trump commercial on CNN that uses AI copy of Trump's voice. I'm surprised the fine print informed people of this. |
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: The Sandman Date: 01 Feb 26 - 05:17 AM This interesting essay by James O'Sullivan was shared by an academic friend who writes about AI in the classroom." quote I disagree, i find the article opinionated and subjective. but we are all entitled to different opinions. |
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: Stilly River Sage Date: 01 Feb 26 - 12:47 PM Artificial intelligence researchers hit by flood of ‘slop’ Conferences restrict use of LLMs after surge of low-quality AI-generated papers and reviews Artificial intelligence researchers are grappling with a problem core to their field: how to stop so-called “AI slop” from damaging confidence in the industry’s scientific work. AI conferences have rushed to restrict the use of large language models for writing and reviewing papers in recent months after being flooded with a wave of poor AI-written content. Further down the article is "A tell-tale sign is when papers contain hallucinated references in the bibliography, or figures that are wrong, said Dietterich. These users are then banned from submitting papers to arXiv for a while, he added." |
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: Bill D Date: 02 Feb 26 - 09:44 AM Long but fascinating conversation with founder of AI |
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Subject: RE: Artificial Intelligence - what could go wrong? From: Bill D Date: 02 Feb 26 - 09:46 AM That conversation is with Jon Stewart being serious. |
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