- TotalDramaEnjoyer : /h/drugs
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- Arkham_Knight : P*ckme
- Lappland : This is bad
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I gave up after looking at 200 profiles because most of them do not even contain actual photos, only anime screenshots and memes. There were like 15 profiles with their faces in it. 14 were in the would not category and the least unattractive guy is only a maybe if I'm drunk:
He's even Ukrainian so he's probably dead by now.
What compels straight men to make dating website profiles that do not even contain their faces?
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The guy https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geoffrey_Hinton
Geoffrey Hinton is a British-Canadian computer scientist and cognitive psychologist, most noted for his work on artificial neural networks. From 2013 to 2023, he divided his time working for Google (Google Brain) and the University of Toronto, before publicly announcing his departure from Google in May 2023, citing concerns about the risks of artificial intelligence (AI) technology.
We'll need universal basic income - AI 'godfather'
The computer scientist regarded as the βgodfather of artificial intelligenceβ says the government will have to establish a universal basic income to deal with the impact of AI on inequality.
Professor Geoffrey Hinton told BBC Newsnight that a benefits reform giving fixed amounts of cash to every citizen would be needed because he was βvery worried about AI taking lots of mundane jobsβ.
βI was consulted by people in Downing Street and I advised them that universal basic income was a good idea,β he said.
He said while he felt AI would increase productivity and wealth, the money would go to the rich βand not the people whose jobs get lost and that's going to be very bad for societyβ.
Professor Hinton is the pioneer of neural networks, which form the theoretical basis of the current explosion in artificial intelligence.
Until last year he worked at Google, but left the tech giant so he could talk more freely about the dangers from unregulated AI.
The concept of a universal basic income amounts to the government paying all individuals a set salary regardless of their means.
Critics say it would be extremely costly and divert funding away from public services, while not necessarily helping to alleviate poverty.
A government spokesman said there were "no plans to introduce a universal basic income".
[article continued]
Professor Hinton reiterated his concern that there were human extinction-level threats emerging.
Developments over the last year showed governments were unwilling to rein in military use of AI, he said, while the competition to develop products rapidly meant there was a risk tech companies wouldn't βput enough effort into safetyβ.
Professor Hinton said "my guess is in between five and 20 years from now there's a probability of half that we'll have to confront the problem of AI trying to take over".
This would lead to an βextinction-level threatβ for humans because we could have βcreated a form of intelligence that is just better than biological intelligenceβ¦ That's very worrying for usβ.
AI could βevolveβ, he said, βto get the motivation to make more of itselfβ and could autonomously βdevelop a sub-goal of getting controlβ.
He said there was already evidence of large language models - a type of AI algorithm used to generate text - choosing to be deceptive.
He said recent applications of AI to generate thousands of military targets were the βthin end of the wedgeβ.
βWhat I'm most concerned about is when these can autonomously make the decision to kill people," he said.
Professor Hinton said something similar to the Geneva Conventions - the international treaties that establish legal standards for humanitarian treatment in war - may be needed to regulate the military use of AI.
"But I don't think that's going to happen until after very nasty things have happened,β he added.
Asked if the West was in a Manhattan Project-style race - referring to nuclear weapons research during World War Two - with autocracies such as Russia and China on the military use of AI, Professor Hinton replied: β[Russian President Vladimir] Putin said some years ago that whoever controls AI controls the world. So I imagine they're working very hard.
"Fortunately, the West is probably well ahead of them in research. We're probably still slightly ahead of China. But China's putting more resources in. And so in terms of military uses I think there's going to be a raceβ.
He said a better solution would be a prohibition on military uses of AI.
- B64 : Gross
- TheFatController : no happy ending
- DickButtKiss : "AI slop" is right. This is satanic ai SHIT ART!!!
- molch : h/kino
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Ut oh. I've said the quiet part out loud again.
— Dave Kellogg (@Kellblog) May 18, 2024
European founders lose their bearings when they expand to the US and hire their first few employees, typically salespeople.
"These people are gods," is how one founder told me he felt early in the expansion process.
This isnt drama or dramatic but who can't appreciate the absolute state of europeans?
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Is seventeen square miles of prime Georgian farmland turned into grassland enough space for a herd of elephants?