Recent comments in /f/MachineLearning
PM_ME_YOUR_PROFANITY t1_j7lajpy wrote
Reply to comment by Sirisian in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
Have you seen the work which connects ChatGPT to WolframAlpha?
WokeAssBaller t1_j7ladne wrote
Reply to comment by emerging-tech-reader in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
Please without the transformer we would never be able to scale, not to mention all of this being built on BERT as well. Then a bunch of companies scaled it further including Google
gosnold t1_j7l8que wrote
Look up NNOM
mirrorcoloured t1_j7l8e29 wrote
Reply to comment by hemphock in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
Wow I didn't expect numbers that high! I wonder if there's a large AA/reddit overlap, or if that's representative of search as a whole.
Google is showing a steady increase in reddit interest over time, and the second related query I see is "what is reddit". It's interesting that it's roughly linear and doesn't have the increasing growth that you'd expect from word-of-mouth spread.
deathisnear t1_j7l7qyr wrote
Reply to [D] Should I focus on python or C++? by NoSleep19
If you learn C++ to a decent degree Python is relatively trivial to pick up. If you learn Python to a decent degree there's still going to be a bit of a learning curve when you learn C++.
drooobie t1_j7l7mo0 wrote
Reply to comment by astrange in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
If you replaced the assistant in my google home with ChatGPT I would use it a lot more. Maybe I'm an exception, but I don't think so.
junetwentyfirst2020 t1_j7l7ctn wrote
Reply to [D] Should I focus on python or C++? by NoSleep19
It depends what you want to do. Deep Learning is pretty much to be Python, but 3D Reconstruction is almost exclusively C++.
If you want to do robotics, do you want to do Deep Learning for robotics, or do you want to do 3DR? Same question for medical imagine.
Also is what you want to work on run in a cloud service like GCP, or is it run on device? If it’s run on device there’s like 100% change it’s C++.
My plan is to know both.
pm_me_your_pay_slips t1_j7l6icx wrote
Reply to comment by orbital_lemon in [N] Getty Images sues AI art generator Stable Diffusion in the US for copyright infringement by Wiskkey
note that the VQ-VAE part of the SD model alone can encode and decode arbitrary natural/human-made images pretty well with very little artifacts. The diffusion model part of SD is learning a distribution of images in that encoded space.
aicharades OP t1_j7l6f7u wrote
Here's a horror movie based on all of Warren Buffet’s Shareholder Letters from 1977 - 2019
Input: https://medium.com/@r44d/every-berkshire-hathaway-shareholder-letter-in-1-pdf-cdf661625dbb
------------------------
Prompts:
Map Prompt
'Instructions': I want you to act as a screenwriter. You will develop an engaging and creative story outline for a horror feature length film that can captivate its viewers. You have been given an except of a collection of Warren Buffet’s shareholder letters that you must use as source material. The film’s genre must be horror. Start with coming up with interesting characters from the excerpt, the setting of the story, dialogues between the characters etc. Once your character development is complete, create an exciting storyline filled with twists and turns that keeps the viewers in suspense until the end. Note the full names of characters every time they are mentioned. Note location names.
The summary must be no longer than 650 characters long. \n
'Input': {text} \n
'Output':
Reduce Prompt
'Instructions': You are a copyeditor. Combine the below summaries into one cohesive narrative. The combined output must be a story less than 4,000 characters long. Keep the content and context preserved. \n
'Input': {text} \n
'Output':
------------------------
Output: Mrs. Blumkin, a 93 year old Board Chairwoman, is the only one who can save the world from a mysterious force. With the help of her progeny, she must battle the darkness and uncover the secrets of the Courier-Express, Nebraska Furniture Mart, See's Candies, World Book, and Kirby. Along the way, she discovers the power of family and the strength of her own courage.
Charlie and Warren stumble upon a mysterious collection of Warren Buffet's shareholder letters. After reading the letters, they discover the existence of a supernatural being, Mr. Market, who offers them mouth-watering opportunities in exchange for their souls. They must battle against Mr. Market and his minions to save their lives and the world.
The group soon discovers that the company is using dark magic to gain immense wealth and power. With the help of Mrs. B, the 96-year-old founder of the Nebraska Furniture Mart, they must stop the company before it's too late. Along the way, they must battle a ruthless businessman and his henchmen.
When a hurricane causes massive losses, primary insurers and reinsurers are left with financial stakes in each loss settlement. Enter Berkshire Hathaway, who offers to write up to $250 million of catastrophe coverage. When rates become attractive, they book a substantial amount of business. But when losses exceed the retained amount, the reinsurers pay 95% of the excess up to its contractual limit, leaving the primary insurer with a financial stake in each loss. With a huge sum on the line, the stakes are high and the horror begins.
The group soon realizes that the letters contain clues to a mysterious and powerful force that has been manipulating the world's economy for centuries. As they investigate further, they come face to face with a terrifying supernatural entity that will stop at nothing to protect its secrets. With the help of Roberto Goizueta, the former CEO of Coca-Cola, they must find a way to stop the evil before it's too late. Rich Santulli, the CEO of NetJets, is a brilliant executive but also a mysterious figure. When his Aunt Alice asks him if she can afford a fur coat, he replies with a cryptic answer that sets the stage for a horror story.
The group must decipher the clues and battle the dark forces to save the town and themselves. Along the way, they must face off against Tony, a ruthless businessman who is determined to keep the power for himself. With the help of The Washington Post Company, Wells Fargo & Company, and American Express Company, the group must unravel the mystery and save the town.
Tony and Rod, two insurance executives, are tasked with increasing their policy count. When they discover a series of underreported losses, they uncover a sinister plot involving embezzlement and product liability. As they investigate further, they realize the losses are connected to a mysterious figure from the past. With the help of John, Tom, Michael, Don, and Don, they must unravel the secrets of the past before it's too late.
Finally, the group discovers that their investments have unleashed a supernatural force. As they try to stop the force, they must battle the mysterious entity and its minions in a race against time to save the world from destruction. With the help of Jim Kilts, the former CEO of Gillette, they must find a way to stop the evil before it destroys them all. With twists and turns that keep viewers in suspense until the end, this horror film will captivate its audience. Will they be able to save the world before it's too late? With their lives on the line, they must fight to uncover the truth and save the world from the dark force. Will they make it out alive?
bartturner t1_j7l64gq wrote
Reply to comment by harharveryfunny in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
> OpenAI trained GPT on Microsoft Azure - it has zero to do with Google's TPU.
Geeze. ChatGPT would NOT exist if not for Google because the underlying tech was invented by Google.
OpenAI uses other people's stuff instead of inventing things themselves like Google.
Many of the big AI breakthroughs from the last decade+ have come from Google. GANs is another perfect example.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transformer_(machine_learning_model)
The TPUs are key in being able to bring a large language model to market at scale. Not training but the inference aspect.
junetwentyfirst2020 t1_j7l55ym wrote
Reply to comment by visarga in Does the high dimensionality of AI systems that model the real world tell us something about the abstract space of ideas? [D] by Frumpagumpus
That is so true
blackhole077 t1_j7l4yc9 wrote
Reply to Model/paper ideas: reinforcement learning with a deterministic environment [D] by EmbarrassedFuel
Perhaps the Semi-Markov Decision Process Paper by Sutton would be a good start
This should give you the paper: http://www-anw.cs.umass.edu/~barto/courses/cs687/Sutton-Precup-Singh-AIJ99.pdf
It sounds like you're looking for "options" in reinforcement learning, so any papers that cover that idea may be of interest to you.
GreenOnGray t1_j7l4tb3 wrote
Reply to comment by edjez in [D] Are large language models dangerous? by spiritus_dei
What do you think the outcome would be? Assume the AIs can not coordinate with each other explicitly.
HateRedditCantQuitit t1_j7l30f2 wrote
Reply to [N] Getty Images sues AI art generator Stable Diffusion in the US for copyright infringement by Wiskkey
I hate getty as much as anyone, but I'm going to go against the grain and hope they win this. Imagine if instead of getty vs stability, it was artstation vs facebook or something. The same legal principles must apply.
In my ideal future, we'd have things like
- research use is free, but commercial use requires opt-in consent from content creators
- the community adopts open licenses like e.g. copyleft (if you use a GPL9000 dataset, the model must be GPL too, or whatever) or some other widely used opt-in license.
[deleted] t1_j7l28w7 wrote
Reply to comment by NoSleep19 in [D] Should I focus on python or C++? by NoSleep19
[deleted]
hgoel0974 t1_j7l1meo wrote
Reply to comment by xtime595 in [N] Getty Images sues AI art generator Stable Diffusion in the US for copyright infringement by Wiskkey
You seem like the type to argue that any ethics related restrictions on science are bad.
HateRedditCantQuitit t1_j7l1m4c wrote
Reply to comment by currentscurrents in [N] Getty Images sues AI art generator Stable Diffusion in the US for copyright infringement by Wiskkey
>If you can't train models on copyrighted data this means that they can't learn information from the web outside of specific openly-licensed websites like Wikipedia. This would sharply limit their usefulness.
That would be great. It could lead to a future with things like copyleft data, where if you want to train on open stuff, your model legally *must* be open.
Iunaml t1_j7l1avl wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in [D] Yann Lecun seems to be very petty against ChatGPT by supersoldierboy94
> What is the world record for crossing the English Channel entirely on foot
https://twitter.com/goodside/status/1609972546954317824/photo/1
not a fair question for google nor chatgpt, is it
emerging-tech-reader t1_j7kzd3i wrote
Reply to comment by WokeAssBaller in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
> https://arxiv.org/pdf/1706.03762.pdf the paper that made all this possible.
That's reaching IMHO. The original transformer was only around a few million parameters in size. It's not even in the realm of the level of ChatGPT.
You may as well say that MIT invented it as Googles paper is based on methods created by them.
gurdijak t1_j7kz6n3 wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
Whatever happened there
RobbinDeBank t1_j7kyu86 wrote
Reply to comment by chief167 in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
Sadly that’s how the world works. It is run by people with no technical knowledge.
RobbinDeBank t1_j7kykin wrote
Reply to comment by HoneyChilliPotato7 in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
Reddit refusing to implement any half decent search engine and force us to use Google instead
RobbinDeBank t1_j7ky0ju wrote
Reply to comment by starstruckmon in [N] Google: An Important Next Step On Our AI Journey by EducationalCicada
Nice try. What are you hiding at Google Brain?
aicharades OP t1_j7kvuh1 wrote
Reply to comment by AccidentBackground72 in [P] ChatGPT without size limits: upload any pdf and apply any prompt to it by aicharades
It was really awesome to see how OpenAI handles all forms of text when I uploaded the DNC email file. It took the raw emails and created a narrative from them, pretty unreal.
You could do this with a bunch of other historical documents and create stories and chatbots and such.
visarga t1_j7lbf3n wrote
Reply to comment by Iunaml in [D] Yann Lecun seems to be very petty against ChatGPT by supersoldierboy94
I expected it to say "no results" at the very least, but it was no better than a LLM.