“The future ain’t what it used to be.”
-Yogi Berra
- 39 Posts
- 1.43K Comments
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
HistoryPhotos@piefed.social•Para-Beaver, Idaho, USA, 1950English
18·2 days agoParachuting beavers proved to be more cost-effective and it also decreased beaver mortality rates more than alternative methods of relocation.
Such as the beaver trebuchet, beaver cannon, and notoriously expensive and unproductive beaver rail gun.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
13·2 days agoMark the thread. My record stands and and disagreeing typically has ended with those being in the wrong side of things.
I’m not here to tell you things pleasurable to your senses.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
12·3 days agoI don’t think I am. Just mark the convo and come back to it.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
11·3 days agoI’m gaming out the realistic consequences of what a law will mean. It has nothing to do whatsoever if you approve if these companies or not to try and understand the consequences of what will happen if a law like this passes. You don’t get to pick or choose if the speech is from an LLM or a company that gets limited or from an individual. There is no difference from a legal perspective.
And this law and approach to limiting speech to “protect people” from the stupid consequences of their own action, they aren’t new. And we already know the consequences. Large corporate entities will just get around them or pay an inconsequential fine, and individuals will have their rights curtailed as a result
The entire thread here is falling for an incredibly obvious astroturfing campaign because they associate LLMs with big bad corporations and the real consequences these bad companies have wreaked. But limiting free speech on the internet won’t stop them, what it will stop is our ability to communicate and resist them.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
24·3 days agoYou aren’t going to get to have it both ways. I promise you, what you are advocating for is such a profound disaster and this whole thing is being astroturfed by tech companies to goad you into limiting your own speech.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
11·3 days agoWikipedia, Google, chatgpt etc are not legal authorities or legal professionals.
Yes. And neither are LLMs or their derivatives.
The reason it’s dangerous to get legal or health information from a chatbot is the same reason you wouldn’t want to randomly trust reddit.
And yet people do, and we accept that as a necessary consequence of maintaining free speech as a principal.
The exact arguments being accepted in this thread are the same which led directly to crackdowns in Hungary, China, and Russia.
If you are okay with limiting and regulating LLMs as a form of speech, I promise it’s your speech which will end up limited, and a very small number of companies will control all speech on the internet. You should stop.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
23·3 days agoLet’s swap out a chatbot with a sloptuber on YouTube making up stuff about sovereign citizen nonsense. How about then.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
11·3 days agoThat’s a totally irrelevant comparison. There is no equivalent publisher of the law to the US House of reps. Nothing the Wikipedia publishes has legal bearing; Everything the house of Reps publish does have legal bearing.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
21·3 days agoI promise you, the result of this will be unlimited free speech for corporations and their LLMs, with limited and regulated free speech for you. Save or favorite the comment.
It’s the same “protect the children” anti free speech advocacy in a different wrapper, but more appealing to this audience because “llm bad”.
They’re using your emotional response to not liking LLMs as a tool to trick you into giving away your rights.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
15·3 days agoItt thread: People with absolutely no fucking clue about what the consequences of their emotional response of “ai bad” will actually result in.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
36·3 days agoWikipedia isn’t giving you advice, it’s giving you information. There is a big difference between me taking information and forming an opinion, versus being given an opinion by a system that is responding to a specific situation explained to it.
Okay lets try this then:
Chat bots aren’t giving you advice, it’s giving you information. There is a big difference between me taking information and forming an opinion, versus being given an opinion by a system that is responding to a specific situation explained to it.
Show me the difference.
Also, people get in trouble for giving legal advice,
No, they don’t, unless they are genuinely misrepresenting their positions. Sovcit influencers are well within their rights to make up all kinds of gobbly-gookey-garbage pseudo-legal advice.
People who get in trouble are those that follow the gobbly-gookey-garbage pseudo-legal advice.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
43·3 days agoI don’t think you are wrong, but again, thats not the case.
You’re making an argument about speech here.
Lets say you make a fan website based entirely on fine tuned LLM which acts and responds as James Spader from Boston legal. Are you liable if a user of that website construes that speech as legal advice?
If you are willing to give up access to speech so easily, I have almost no hope for Americans in the near future.
What laws like this do is create an incredibly high pass filter to in positions of established power. Its literally suicidal in regards to freedom of speech on the internet.
The right answer is that if you are dumb enough to have gotten your legal advice from an AI hallucination of James Spader, you get to absorb those consequences. The wrong answer is to tell people they aren’t allowed to build fan websites of James Spader giving questionable legal advice.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
48·3 days agoWikipedia doesn’t give “legal advice”, it has information about these laws, with the sources cited.
That is very different than asking LLM anything and it throws you random bullshit from unknown sources, with no easy way to verify where it is from or if it is at all accurate.
It seems like your argument is that because Wikipedia “gets it right” and has cited sources, it isn’t liable? Which I promise, is not how liability works.
What if it was Wikipedia versus “Some random sovcit facebook post” then? Is the Sovcit post liable because its sources are bullshit? Since there sources are random bullshit and or unknown, do they absorb liability? Again, its the same case, that is not how liability works.
People are going to have to acknowledge you can’t have it both ways.
Also…
with no easy way to verify where it is from or if it is at all accurate.
C’mon. Plenty of LLM’s can also hallucinate sources which are easily verified. And like with Wikipedia, one could go check them.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Trippin' Through Time@lemmy.ca•Draw me like one of your French girls.English
181·3 days ago
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Technology@lemmy.world•New York considers bill that would ban chatbots from giving legal, medical adviceEnglish
1712·3 days agoI mean.
Is the wikipedia responsible for you reading an article about a law and then taking that as legal advice?
[Edit: if you are downvoting this, downvote away, but you owe an argument below as to why. I promise this exact argument will come up in the courts over this issue]
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Trippin' Through Time@lemmy.ca•Draw me like one of your French girls.English
26·3 days agoEither gravity does not apply or the nun here has the shoulders and quads of an Olympian.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
Asklemmy@lemmy.ml•Whats your advice to the younger folks of Lemmy?
15·3 days agoI think hedonism is important, but it comes at a cost. The candle the burns twice as bright and all that. At the same time if you never fuck around, you’ll never find out.
I think far too often young people go through life thinking they already know who they are, instead of treating life as an opportunity to find out who they are. They become calcified, ossified in their beliefs about their own identity, a constant and repeated telling themselves of who they are in an effort to believe these things.
An alternative approach is to try to break down who you are, repeatedly and continuously. To try new things, to change the situation. Leave a city without warning and move somewhere you don’t know the language. Abandon your belongings, your phone, your identity and start over. Change the situation entirely. Begin to understand what is you and what is the world. If you move from place to place, and you find yourself always confronted by the same types of people, maybe you are seeing a reflection of something you are bringing with you from place to place.
There is a very western identity of “knowing” who you are while simultaneously having done no exploration of who that person might be. I find it very curious.
TropicalDingdong@lemmy.worldto
pics@lemmy.world•California Sheephead at Ensenada's fishmarket, Baja California, México (2003)
2·3 days agoEnsenada is a gem.



















Bull kelp: