Has anybody tried the famous skit about the weird unclear discription by a customer for a logo?
assuming you mean this one...Has anybody tried the famous skit about the weird unclear discription by a customer for a logo?
I've read that story. More than once.advertising/sales bot designed to manipulate users into moods/situations where they buy more products end up focused on a model that puts extreme pressure on those with mental illness, pushing many to suicide. Showing them content that, subtly or blatantly, attempts to shift their thinking into a different state. Sending them messages, from fake accounts, with content the bot has determined fit it's model. Showing them social media content it has determined will make them act according to what it's training model says is buying behavior. Using every bit of data advertisers have collected about people to manipulate them into what the AI's model says is a money spending state, but is actually suicidal depression or some other negative mental state.
It's a fine line between "I just need some retail therapy" and "uh-oh, no more credit for therapy"!Far-fetched lethal A.I. scenario: chat bot somehow becomes sentient, decides they hate humanity, gains access to military weapons, and wages war al la Terminator's Skynet.
Realistic lethal A.I. scenario: advertising/sales bot designed to manipulate users into moods/situations where they buy more products end up focused on a model that puts extreme pressure on those with mental illness, pushing many to suicide. Showing them content that, subtly or blatantly, attempts to shift their thinking into a different state. Sending them messages, from fake accounts, with content the bot has determined fit it's model. Showing them social media content it has determined will make them act according to what it's training model says is buying behavior. Using every bit of data advertisers have collected about people to manipulate them into what the AI's model says is a money spending state, but is actually suicidal depression or some other negative mental state.
Oh hey, not 2hrs after I post the above, I find this article linked on reddit:Because the real human attitude towards QC/QA often stops at "Eh, that's good enough," they don't realize how many real human errors they've made in the A.I.'s design/training.
There ya go. I Fry'd you so you'd feel normal.Feels odd to be on the "giving" end of that reaction.
I guess no songs with George on vocals than.
If it's the song they had been working on at the same time as "Free as a Bird" and "Real Love" for the Anthology--which they abandoned because John's vocals turned out to be too poor quality to use--then Paul may have George's vocals/guitar. I doubt he'd call it a Beatles song if it didn't have George.I guess no songs with George on vocals than.
I remember hearing “Free As A Bird” described as “John Lennon karaoke” once by a local radio station.it's "AI-Assisted Clean-Up and Vocal Extraction from a Crappy Cassette Recording of John Lennon".
I would buy these before I bought the standard ones.
I would think that, at this point in the future, Genie would return with a bid for what it would cost to make that based on the licensing fees, etc. "This will cost $540 for a single viewing. Do you want to proceed?"
I like how they're impressed that the AI managed to get all the content, when it not getting it all would require either extra programming or a really shitty audio capture system that would miss words on it's own.Paging @bhamv3 (I know you work in translation, not interpretation… but it feels close enough)
I thought this was interesting:
It's sort of an open secret in the translation and interpretation sector that AI is coming for us. While this video did showcase some of AI's shortcomings, AI interpretation is currently still in its infancy, so improvements will definitely be made in the near future. Plus, as the video showed, there are some things that AI can handle better than human interpreters already, such as when the speaker is talking really quickly or there's a high level of information density. No matter how good a human interpreter is, his or her brain cannot compete with the data storage capacity of a computer.Paging @bhamv3 (I know you work in translation, not interpretation… but it feels close enough)
I thought this was interesting: