• Lenny@lemmy.world
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      Actually I use it as a starting point for fungi. Seek will usually get me to the genus, and from there I can cross reference various books to narrow it down. Hell, sometimes it’ll give me an exact match, and then I just have to perform a yes or no ID with my field guides. That being said, I mostly end up with no, I’m shit scared of all amanitas and most mushrooms just aren’t tasty enough to warrant the effort.

    • nul@programming.dev
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      I have heard that spore prints are a reliable way of determining mushroom species (removing the stem, putting the underside of the mushroom on an ink pad, pressing against paper, and comparing the print with those of known species).

      I bet an AI could analyze that data pretty well. But since there’s really no market for such a product, if I want it, I would have to make it myself. In which case I highly advise against using it because I really don’t trust me.

  • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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    I don’t actually know if it’s considered a deepfake when it’s just a voice; but I’ve been using the hell out of Speechify, which basically deepfakes voices and pairs them with a text input.

    …so… nursing school, we have an absolute fuck-ton of reading assignments. Staring at a page of text makes my brain melt, but thankfully nowadays everything’s digital, so I can copy entire chapters at a time, and paste them into Speechify. Now suddenly I have Snoop-dogg giving me a lecture on how to manage a patient as they’re coming out of general anesthesia. Gets me through the reading fucking fast, and it retains so, SO much better than just trying to cram a bunch of flavorless text.

    • Glytch@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      Speechify also pays the people who’s voices they’re using rather than taking them from publicly available videos and recordings without permission.

      • PhlubbaDubba@lemm.ee
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        That’s also the business model behind ad localization now, they’ll pay the actor once for appearing on set and then pay them royalties to keep AI editing the commercial to feature different products in different countries.

        • Glytch@lemmy.world
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          If they’re up front about it and if the actor agrees to it (as with Speechify), I don’t see a problem with that. SAG should also be involved to try and determine fair compensation.

      • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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        I think it comes down more to understanding what the tech is potentially good at, and executing it in an ethical way. My personal use is one thing; but Speechify made an entire business out of it, and people aren’t calling for them to be burned to the ground.

        As opposed to Google’s take of “OMG AI! RUB IT INTO EVERYONE’S NOSE, THEY’RE GONNA LOVE IT!” and just slapping it onto the internet, and then pretending to be surprised when people ask for a pizza recipe and it tells them to add Elmer’s Glue to it…

        Two controlled inputs giving a predictable output; vs just letting it browse 4chan and see what happens. The tech industry definitely seems to lean toward the later, which is fucking tragic, but there are gems scattered throughout the otherwise pure pile of shit that LLMs are at the moment.

        • Paradachshund@lemmy.today
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          In my opinion using someone’s voice without their consent in a public way is unethical, but you doing it in private doesn’t hurt anyone.

          • P00ptart@lemmy.world
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            20 days ago

            Say that again, but think of a a fat old white dude jerking off to what he’s created, and you’ll figure out several ways it could hurt someone.

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    The blanket term “AI” has set us back quite a lot I think.

    The plant thing and the deepfakes/search engines/chatbots are two entirely different types of machine learning algorithm. One focussed on distinguishing between things, the other focussed on generating stuff.

    But “AI” is the marketable term, and the only one most people know. And so here we are.

      • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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        I particularly “Love” that a bunch of like, procedural generation and search things that have existed for years are now calling themselves “AI” (without having changed in any way) because marketing.

        • Focal@pawb.social
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          Reminds me of how everything on a computer used to be a “program”, but now they’re all just “apps”

        • smokebuddy [he/him]@lemmy.today
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          I read a story on CBC the other day that was all about how an AI voice was taking over from hosts on off-hours at some local radio station, then deeper in the article it revealed that everything the “AI” reads was written by a human. So it was about someone using text-to-speech technology that has been around since at least the 70s the whole time. Hardly newsworthy in any way except for “IT’S AI!”

          • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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            19 days ago

            Mind you there -are- TTS tools that use machine learning (which is what advertisers call “AI” now) for more realistic voices. No idea if the radio was using those at all though.

      • ByteOnBikes@slrpnk.net
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        Oh man this one drives me up the wall too.

        Someone literally with a straight face said how cool Minecraft has AI generated worlds and I wanted to flip a table.

    • angrystego@lemmy.world
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      20 days ago

      You’re talking about types of machine learning algorithms. Is that a more precise term that should be used here instead of AI? And would the meme work better if it wss used. I’m asking, because I really don’t understand these things.

      • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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        There are proper words for them, but they are ~technical jargon~. It is sufficient to know that they are different types of algorithm, only really similar in that both use machine learning.

        And would the meme work better if it wss used

        No because it is a meme, and if people had learned the proper words for things, we wouldn’t need a meme at all.

        • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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          19 days ago

          Both use machine learning algorithms that are modelled off the behaviour of neurons.

          They are still different algorithms but they’re not that wildly different in the grand scale of the field of machine learning.

      • 31337@sh.itjust.works
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        Likely transformers now (I think SD3 uses a ViT for text encoding, and ViTs are currently one of the best model architectures for image classification).

    • ricecake@sh.itjust.works
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      It’s particularly annoying because those are all AI. AI is the blanket term for the entire category of systems that are man made and exhibit some aspect of intelligence.

      So the marketing term isn’t wrong, but referring to everything by it’s most general category is error prone and makes people who know or work with the differences particularly frustrated.
      It’s easier to say “I made a little AI that learned how I like my tea”, but then people think of something that writes full sentences and tells me to put dogs in my tea. “I made a little machine learning based optimization engine that learned how I like my tea” conveys it much less well.

    • Kaput@lemmy.world
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      AI is the new flavor, just like 2.0, SIM-everything, VIRTUAL-everything, CYBER -everything, were before. Eventually good use cases will emerge, and the junk will be replaced by the next buzzword.

      • Count Regal Inkwell@pawb.social
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        18 days ago

        Good use cases for AI already exist

        And I’m saying this as a certified hater of GenAI

        Machine Learning as an invention has already been used for good, useful things. It’s just that it never got caught up in hype like the modern wave of Generative Transformers (which is apparently the proper term for those overhyped chatbots and picture generators)

  • PugJesus@lemmy.world
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    “AI renaming image files for easier search”

    You’re cool, though, you can stay

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        We’re in that awkward part of AI where all the degenerates are using it in unethical ways, and it will take time for legislation and human culture to catch up. The early internet was a wild place too.

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        I still don’t see how AI-generated porn is any different from photoshopping someone’s face on to someone else’s naked body.

        • SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          It’s less effort and typically more realistic (in the sense that it looks more real, not that it is)

          But it’s unethical either way, don’t make non-consensual porn

        • confusedbytheBasics@lemmy.world
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          I don’t know much about AI porn but I see a huge difference between putting a real person’s face on a real person’s nude body and putting an imaginary face on an imaginary nude body.

  • MattMatt@lemmy.world
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    The difference is that plant identification is a classification problem, not an LLM.

      • MindTraveller@lemmy.ca
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        I think state machines are cool and groovy. I still don’t understand genetic algorithms but I wish I did.

        15 years ago we were all saying “AI is just a series of IF statements” because of expert systems and y’all forgot

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          Genetic algorithms kinda suck as they use random variations and breeding to solve a problem which is much slower than using backpropagation with any decent reward modeler. It’s the difference between selective breeding and gene splicing in the real world.

    • SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      The most annoying thing since the rise of LLMs is that everyone thinks that all of AI is just LLMs

      Classification machine learning models can also be neural networks, which is something that was called AI also

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      Some customer support “bots” could be considered classification problems, no? At least in so far as which department does a call get routed to.

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        At least it’s routing you to a department instead of trying to help you solve the issue yourself by showing you different help pages you already looked at before trying to contact support.

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          If you actually looked at the help pages before contacting support, you are in the minority.

      • howrar@lemmy.ca
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        Could be. Classification is a type of problem. LLM is a type of model. You can use LLMs to solve classification problems. There’s a good chance that’s what’s happening here.

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      I would guess it is a conv neural network which is probably similar to what is being used in any image/video related AI such as deep fakes

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    I am a physicist. I am good at math, okay at programming, and not the best at using programming to accomplish the math. Using AI to help turn the math in my brain into functional code is a godsend in terms of speed, as it will usually save me a ton of time even if the code it returns isn’t 100% correct on the first attempt. I can usually take it the rest of the way after the basis is created. It is also great when used to check spelling/punctuation/grammar (so using it like the glorified spellcheck it is) and formatting markup languages like LaTeX.

    I just wish everyone would use it to make their lives easier, not make other people’s lives harder, which seems to be the way it is heading.

    • hoshikarakitaridia@lemmy.world
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      With all the hot takes and dichotomies out there, it would be nice if we could have a nuanced discussion about what we actually want from AI right now.

      Not all applications are good and not all are bad. The ideas that you have for AI are so interesting, I wish we could just collect those. Would be way more helpful than all the AI shills or haters rn.

      • brbposting@sh.itjust.works
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        nuanced discussion about what we actually want from AI right now.

        👆

        So on Bluesky, the non-free almost-Twitter Twitter replacement, as anti-AI as X-Twitter is pro: you see extreme anti-AI sentiment with zero room for any application of the tech, and I have to wonder if defining the tech is part of the problem.

        They do want Gmail to filter spam, right?

        They don’t hate plant ID apps, do they?

        I’m guessing they mean “I don’t need ChatGPT, which was enabled by theft, and I don’t want chatbots in other apps either.”

        But they come out saying effectively “don’t filter spam!” the way they talk. At least arguably: not like every expert in the field would use the exact same definition, but still I doubt the average absolutist is fully aware what their message may come across as.

    • Domi@lemmy.secnd.me
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      Also works well for the opposite use case.

      I’m a good programmer but bad at math and can never remember which algorithms to use so I just ask it how to solve problem X or calculate Y and it gives me a list of algorithms which would make sense.

    • webhead@lemmy.world
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      Yeah I’ve been using it to help my novice ass code stuff for my website and it’s been incredible. There’s some stuff I thought yeah I’m probably never gonna get around to this that I rocketed through in an AFTERNOON. That’s what I want AI for. Not shitty customer service.

    • Reyali@lemm.ee
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      Great examples. The most valuable use for me has been writing SQL queries. SQL is not a part of my job description, but data informs choices I make. I used to have to ask a developer on my team all the questions I had and pull them off their core work to get answers for me, then I had to guess at interpreting the data and inevitably bug them again with all my follow-up questions.

      I convinced the manager to get me read access to the databases. I can now do that stuff myself. I had very basic understanding of SQL before, enough to navigate the tables and make some sense of reading queries, but writing queries would have taken HOURS of learning.

      As it is, I type in basics about the table structure and ask my questions. It spits out queries, and I run them and tweak as needed. Without AI, I probably would have used my SQL access twice in the past year and been annoyed at how little I was able to get, but as it is I’ve used it dozens of times and been able to make better informed decisions because of it.

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    I’ve had to literally perform a Google search to find a customer support phone number before. Because the website of the company just kept redirecting me in circles.

    Their phone support was just as useless, though.

    It was GameStop, by the way.

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    We need to strike back with an AI customer which alerts us if we could finally talk or chat again with a human if all automatic solutions are discussed.

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    Using it for plant identification is fine as long as it’s an AI designed/trained for plant ID (even then don’t use it to decide if you can eat it). Just don’t use an LLM for plant ID, or for anything else relating to actual reality. LLMs are only for generating plausible-sounding strings of text, not for facts or accurate info.

    • kronisk @lemmy.world
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      Best and easiest way is to reverse image search from a photo, it’s easy to look through the results for yourself and see what actually matches (it’s frequently not the first search result). Perhaps there’s some kind of AI involved in reverse image search, but searching like this is infinitely preferable to me instead of some bot telling me an answer which may or may not be correct. It’s not “convenient” if you actually care about the answer.

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      Mushroom identification is extra flaky.

      Expert level mushroom identification is a skill and I wouldn’t recommend anyone use those apps and assume a mushroom is correct. (And especially don’t eat it without absolutely verifying)

      Plant identification - not concerned. Most normal people aren’t ingesting a plant in the wild. And I mean if you’re rubbing against a plant and get a reaction, ideally that’s a lesson you only learn once.

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      Tbh anything that can give you a curated set of options, and some resources that can help you make the final decision is pretty incredible. But that’s the thing about most AI - it needs some human vetting for good results, regardless of how powerful it is

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      The button to take a photo of a plant/animal?

      “Observe”

      Hold up gang, I need to observe this species right quick

      Instant scientist cred

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    hmm guess which one also doesn’t suck the energy equivalent of a sizeable town

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    AI search is great.

    The more “searchey”, and less “generativey”, the better. What goes against the direction every provider is going, but it’s still great.

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      I like using perplexity because the ads aren’t in your face and it’s pretty good at providing concise answers… And it doesn’t fuck with my news feed every time I look up some random thing

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        It’s really god to search things that you don’t know the name already.

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    I’ve learned that training a model to search your (companies) unmaintainable, unorganized, and continuously growing documentation storage is a godsend.

    • masterspace@lemmy.ca
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      AI search is legitimately useful.

      For something like Salesforce development, you’ve got the answer spread across their old framework docs, their new framework docs, their config settings reference page, and a couple stack overflow questions.

      Copilot / Bing search has legitimately been incredibly helpful at synthesizing answers from those and providing sources so that I can verify, do more research, and ask follow up questions.