• Churbleyimyam@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    I think AI has mostly been about luring investors into pumping up share prices rather than offering something of genuine value to consumers.

    Some people are gonna lose a lot of other people’s money over it.

    • SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Yes, I’m getting some serious dot-com bubble vibes from the whole AI thing. But the dot-com boom produced Amazon, and every company is basically going all-in in the hope they are the new Amazon while in the end most will end up like pets.com but it’s a risk they’re willing to take.

      • slaacaa@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        “You might lose all your money, but that is a risk I’m willing to take”

        • visionairy AI techbro talking to investors
        • SlopppyEngineer@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Investors pump money in a bunch of companies so the chances of at least one of them making it big and paying them back for all the failed investments is almost guaranteed. That’s what taking risks is all about.

          • verity_kindle@sh.itjust.works
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            4 months ago

            Sure, but it SEEMS, that some investors are relying on buzzword and hype, without research and ignoring the fundamentals of investing, i.e. besides the ever evolving claims of the CEO, is the company well managed? What is their cash flow and where is it going a year from now? Do the upper level managers have coke habits?

            • slaacaa@lemmy.world
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              4 months ago

              You’re right, but these fundamentals don’t really matter anymore, investors are buying hype and hoping to sell a bigger hype for more money later.

      • barsoap@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        OpenAI will fail. StabilityAI will fail. CivitAI will prevail, mark my words.

    • peto (he/him)@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      A lot of it is follow the leader type bullshit. For companies in areas where AI is actually beneficial they have already been implementing it for years, quietly because it isn’t something new or exceptional. It is just the tool you use for solving certain problems.

      Investors going to bubble though.

    • spiderman@ani.social
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      4 months ago

      Yeah, can make some products better but most of the products these days that use AI, it doesn’t actually need them. It’s annoying to use products that actively shovel AI when it doesn’t even need it.

      • Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        Ya know what pfoduct MIGHT be better with AI?

        Toasters. They have ONE JOB, and everybody agrees their toaster is crap. But you’re not going to buy another toaster, because that too will be crap.

        How about a toaster, that accurately, and evenly toasts your bread, and then DOESN’T give you a heart attack at 5am when you’re still half asleep???

        IS THAT TOO MUCH TO ASK???

    • Riskable@programming.dev
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      4 months ago

      My doorbell camera manufacturer now advertises their products as using, “Local AI” meaning, they’re not relying on a cloud service to look at your video in order to detect humans/faces/etc. Honestly, it seems like a good (marketing) move.

    • SLVRDRGN@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      I tried to find the advert but I see this on YouTube a lot - an Adobe AI ad which depicts, without shame, AI writing out a newsletter/promo for a business owner’s new product (cookies or ice cream or something), showing the owner putting no effort into their personal product and a customer happily consuming because they were attracted by the thoughtless promo.

      How are producers/consumers okay with everything being so mediocre??

      • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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        1 month ago

        How are producers/consumers okay with everything being so mediocre??

        “You’re always trying to make everything just a little bit worse so that you can feel good about having a lot more of it. I love it. It’s so human!” - The Good Place

    • themurphy@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Definitely. Many companies have implemented AI without thinking with 3 brain cells.

      Great and useful implementation of AI exists, but it’s like 1/100 right now in products.

      • PerogiBoi@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        My old company before they laid me off laid off our entire HR and Comms teams in exchange for ChatGPT Enterprise.

        “We can just have an AI chatbot for HR and pay inquiries and ask Dall-e to create icons and other content”.

        A friend who still works there told me they’re hiring a bunch of “prompt engineers” to improve the quality of the AI outputs haha

        • verity_kindle@sh.itjust.works
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          4 months ago

          I’m sorry. Hope you find a better job, on the inevitable downswing of the hype, when someone realizes that a prompt can’t replace a person in customer service. Customers will invest more time, i.e., even wait in a purposely engineered holding music hell, to have a real person listen to them.

        • themurphy@lemmy.ml
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          4 months ago

          That’s an even worse ‘use case’ than I could imagine.

          HR should be one of the most protected fields against AI, because you actually need a human resource.

          And “prompt engineer” is so stupid. The “job” is only necessary because the AI doesn’t understand what you want to do well enough. The only productive guy you could hire would be a programmer or something, that could actually tinker with the AI.

      • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        If my employer is anything to go by, much of it is just unimaginative businesspeople who are afraid of missing out on what everyone else is selling.

        At work we were instructed to shove ChatGPT into our systems about a month after it became a thing. It makes no sense in our system and many of us advised management it was irresponsible since it’s giving people advice of very sensitive matters without any guarantee that advice is any good. But no matter, we had to shove it in there, with small print to cover our asses. I bet no one even uses it, but sales can tell customers the product is “AI-driven”.

  • oyo@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    LLMs: using statistics to generate reasonable-sounding wrong answers from bad data.

      • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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        4 months ago

        And the system doesn’t know either.

        For me this is the major issue. A human is capable of saying “I don’t know”. LLMs don’t seem able to.

        • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Accurate.

          No matter what question you ask them, they have an answer. Even when you point out their answer was wrong, they just have a different answer. There’s no concept of not knowing the answer, because they don’t know anything in the first place.

          • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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            4 months ago

            The worst for me was a fairly simple programming question. The class it used didn’t exist.

            “You are correct, that class was removed in OLD version. Try this updated code instead.”

            Gave another made up class name.

            Repeated with a newer version number.

            It knows what answers smell like, and the same with excuses. Unfortunately there’s no way of knowing whether it’s actually bullshit until you take a whiff of it yourself.

            • nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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              4 months ago

              So instead of Prompt Engineer, the more accurate term should be AI Taste Tester?

              From what I’ve seen you’ll need an iron stomach.

      • treadful@lemmy.zip
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        4 months ago

        They really aren’t. Go ask about something in your area of expertise. At first glance, everything will look correct and in order, but the more you read the more it turns out to be complete bullshit. It’s good at getting broad strokes but the details are very often wrong.

        Now imagine someone that doesn’t have your expertise reading that answer. They won’t recognize those details are wrong until it’s too late.

        • Quereller@lemmy.one
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          4 months ago

          That is about the experience I have. I asked it for factual information in the field I work at. It didn’t gave correct answers. Or, it gave working protocols which were strange and would not be successful.

      • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        With proper framework, decent assertions are possible.

        1. It must cite the source and provide the quote, not just a summary.
        2. An adversarial review must be conducted

        If that is done, the work on the human is very low.

        That said, it’s STILL imperfect, but this is leagues better than one shot question and answer

        • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Except LLMs don’t store sources.

          They don’t even store sentences.

          It’s all a stack of massive N-dimensional probability spaces roughly encoding the probabilities of certain tokens (which are mostly but not always words) appearing after groups of tokens in a certain order.

          And all of that to just figure out “what’s the most likely next token”, an output which is then added to the input and fed into it again to get the next word and so on, producing sentences one word at a time.

          Now, if you feed it as input a long, very precise sentence taken from a unique piece, maybe you’re luck and it will output the correct next word, but if you already have all that you don’t really need an LLM to give you the rest.

          Maybe the “framework” you seek - which is quite akin to a indexer with a natural language interface - can be made with AI, but it’s not something you can do with LLMs because their structure is entirely unsuited for it.

          • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago

            The proper framework does, with data store, indexing and access functions.

            The cutting edge work is absolutely using LLMs in post-rag pipelines.

            Consumer grade chat interfaces def do not do this.

            Edit if you worry about topics like context window, sentence splitting or source extraction, you aren’t using a best in class framework any more.

  • Lvxferre@mander.xyz
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    4 months ago

    As I mentioned in another post, about the same topic:

    Slapping the words “artificial intelligence” onto your product makes you look like those shady used cars salesmen: in the best hypothesis it’s misleading, in the worst it’s actually true but poorly done.

  • esc27@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    They’ve overhyped the hell out of it and slapped those letters on everything including a lot of half baked ideas. Of course people are tired of it and beginning to associate ai with bad marketing.

    This whole situation really does feel dotcommish. I suspect we will soon see an ai crash, then a decade or so later it will be ubiquitous but far less hyped.

    • Vent@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      Thing is, it already was ubiquitous before the AI “boom”. That’s why everything got an AI label added so quickly, because everything was already using machine learning! LLMs are new, but they’re just one form of AI and tbh they don’t do 90% of the stuff they’re marketed as and most things would be better off without them.

  • BradleyUffner@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    LLM based AI was a fun toy when it first broke. Everyone was curious and wanted to play with it, which made it seem super popular. Now that the novelty has worn off, most people are bored and unimpressed with it. The problem is that the tech bros invested so much money in it and they are unwilling to take the loss. They are trying to force it so that they can say they didn’t waste their money.

    • 2pt_perversion@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Honestly they’re still impressive and useful it’s just the hype train overload and trying to implement them in areas they either don’t fit or don’t work well enough yet.

      • blarth@thelemmy.club
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        4 months ago

        I refuse to use Facebook anymore, but my wife and others do. Apparently the search box is now a Meta AI box, and it pisses them every time. They want the original search back.

        • nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br
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          4 months ago

          That’s another thing companies don’t seem to understand. A lot of them aren’t creating new products and services that use ai, but are removing the existing ones, that people use daily and enjoy, and forcing some ai alternative. Of course people are going to be pissed off!

          • Riskable@programming.dev
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            4 months ago

            When one of two things happens:

            • A new hype starts to replace it (can happen fast though!)
            • The hype starts to specialize into subcategories of the hype (e.g. AI images, AI videos, AI text generation)

            When “AI” hype dies down we are likely to see “AI” removed from various topics because enough people know and understand the hyped parent topic. It’ll just be “image generation”, “video generation”, “generated text”, etc.

    • Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      There are different types of people in the market. The informed ones hate AI, and the uninformed love it. The informed ones tend to be the cornerstones of businesses, and the uninformed ones tend to be in charge.

      So we have… All this. All this nonsense. All because of stupid managers.

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Customers worry about what they can do with it, while investors and spectators and vendors worry about buzzwords. Customers determine demand.

      Sadly what some of those customers want to do is to somehow improve their own business without thinking, and then they too care about buzzwords, that’s how the hype comes.

      • MajorHavoc@programming.dev
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        1 month ago

        But what if it actually is magic this time? Just this once!? And we miss the hype train?! (This is a sarcastic impression of real conversations I have had.)

  • qx128@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I can attest this is true for me. I was shopping for a new clothes washer, and was strongly considering an LG until I saw it had “AI wash”. I can see relevance for AI in some places, but washing clothes is NOT one of them. It gave me the feeling LG clothes washer division is full of shit.

    Bought a SpeedQueen instead and been super happy with it. No AI bullshit anywhere in their product info.

  • muculent@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    Hi, I’m annoying and want to be helpful. Am I helpful? If I repeat the same options again when you’ve told me I’m not helpful, will that be helpful? I won’t remember this conversation once it’s ended.

    Hi, which option have you told me you already don’t want would you like?

    Sorry, I didn’t quite catch that, please rage again.

    • Hackworth@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Meanwhile, I just had Cluade turn a few obscure academic papers into a slide deck on the subject, along with presentation notes and interactive graphs, using like 5 prompts and 15 min.

  • cass24@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    The less technologically literate shout “AI is theft!”

    Conspiracy theorists whisper of “government surveils” and “brain hacking chips”…

    As a result, those who don’t understand new technology become fearful of it.

    In itself, “AI” is a total buzzword.

  • ironcrotch@aussie.zone
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    4 months ago

    I get AI has its uses but I don’t need my mouse to have any thing AI related (looking at you Logitech).

  • answersplease77@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I literally uninstalled and disabled every AI process and app in that latest galaxy AI update, which was the whole update btw. my reasons are:

    1- privacy and data sharing.

    2- the battery, cpu, ram of AI bloatware running in the background 247.

    3- it was chaging and doing things which I didn’t want especially in the galary photo albums and camera AI modes.

    • squidspinachfootball@lemm.ee
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      4 months ago

      I was considering a new Samsung phone - is that baked into it? (Assuming you’re talking Samsung anyway, based on the galaxy name)

      • Wintex@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        To give you a second opinion from the other guy, I’ve had quite a few Samsungs in a row at this point. From Galaxy S2 to S23Ultra skipping years between every purchase.

        They are effectively the premium vendor of Android, at least for western audiences. The midrange has some good ones, but other companies do well there too. At the high end, Samsung might lose out a bit to google on images of people, but the phones Samsung sell are well built, have a long support life, have lots of features that usually end up being imported to AOSP and/or Google’s own version of Android. The last few generations are the Apple of Android. The AI features they’ve added can be run on device if you want, and idk what the other guy is talking about, but the AI features aren’t that obnoxiously pushed on my device, the S23 Ultra. I have some things on, most things off. Then again, I’ve used HTC for a few years and iPhone for two weeks, so except for helping my dad with his Pixel 6a while that device lasted, I’ve not really tried other brands. The added customization on Samsung is kind of a problem for me, because I don’t feel like changing brands after being able to customize so much out of the box.

        And I’ve never had issues connecting to a simple Windows computer, given that the phone has always been able to use the normal Plug-and-play driver that is there already. If you have a macbook like I do, it’s a bit cringe, but that’s a macbook issue moreso.

        • FatCrab@lemmy.one
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          4 months ago

          I’ll second this experience. Pricing aside (and even then, because of their new recycling policy, I was able to replace an old galaxy nearly the size of a tablet with a new flip-- that has VERY surprisingly become my favorite phone I’ve ever owned-- for like a hundred bucks), I’ve never had complaints about my Samsung phone and wearables that weren’t general to all smartphones. And the easy integrations between my watch, phone, and earbuds, all Samsung, is really great.