No, opposing LLMs isn't "purity culture."
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@xgranade LLMs told me something critical about my health that no healthcare professional -- and I have a whole team working on me, because I'm bonkers -- ever did. If you want to ask, ask, I can provide very detailed citations and proof.
@codinghorror I'm not a doctor (well, not that *kind* of doctor, anyway), so I'll absolutely admit that I'm not the right person to evaluate those citations. I'll say that from a pretty damned nontrivial degree of expertise with machine learning, I would find it extremely surprising if *on average* text recombination without any underlying semantic model yielded useful advice more commonly than outright dangerous advice.
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@codinghorror I'm not a doctor (well, not that *kind* of doctor, anyway), so I'll absolutely admit that I'm not the right person to evaluate those citations. I'll say that from a pretty damned nontrivial degree of expertise with machine learning, I would find it extremely surprising if *on average* text recombination without any underlying semantic model yielded useful advice more commonly than outright dangerous advice.
@codinghorror Like, nothing about LLMs and the theory behind them prevents anyone from getting lucky — and I'm glad that you got lucky instead of the much more common and probable case. But that doesn't mean that they're anything other than outright terrifyingly dangerous in a medical context more generally.
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@codinghorror I'm not a doctor (well, not that *kind* of doctor, anyway), so I'll absolutely admit that I'm not the right person to evaluate those citations. I'll say that from a pretty damned nontrivial degree of expertise with machine learning, I would find it extremely surprising if *on average* text recombination without any underlying semantic model yielded useful advice more commonly than outright dangerous advice.
@xgranade email me if you want to know. I have a rare set of DNA in some cases, as it turns out.
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@xgranade "You don't want to use the lie machine powered by mulching puppies? What are you, some kind of purist?"
Do you eat chicken? Do you know how the chicken industry mulches all the rooster chicks?
Not to defend LLM use, but I am starting to get tired of the PETA-esque rhetoric. Do these really mulch animals? No. Do they do have negative impacts in other ways? Yes.
Is it that hard to focus on real impacts?
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@codinghorror Like, nothing about LLMs and the theory behind them prevents anyone from getting lucky — and I'm glad that you got lucky instead of the much more common and probable case. But that doesn't mean that they're anything other than outright terrifyingly dangerous in a medical context more generally.
@xgranade people should absolutely be taught all the pros and cons, but I really dislike absolutism and zealotry.. it's not useful, it's not practical, it accomplishes nothing (except in the very narrow cases of civil rights or human dignity). If I wanted more ones and zeroes, I'd own more computers..
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@xgranade people should absolutely be taught all the pros and cons, but I really dislike absolutism and zealotry.. it's not useful, it's not practical, it accomplishes nothing (except in the very narrow cases of civil rights or human dignity). If I wanted more ones and zeroes, I'd own more computers..
@xgranade and as I've said before, if you want to be angry, be angry at cryptocurrency which is gambling, grifters, and human trafficking to the bone. It's horrendous.
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@xgranade and as I've said before, if you want to be angry, be angry at cryptocurrency which is gambling, grifters, and human trafficking to the bone. It's horrendous.
@codinghorror @xgranade The push for LLM inevitability is all the same people as cryptocurrency. That should tell you something about LLMs. It certainly tells me something.
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@codinghorror @xgranade The push for LLM inevitability is all the same people as cryptocurrency. That should tell you something about LLMs. It certainly tells me something.
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@xgranade and as I've said before, if you want to be angry, be angry at cryptocurrency which is gambling, grifters, and human trafficking to the bone. It's horrendous.
@codinghorror @xgranade we can be angry at multiple things
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@codinghorror @xgranade we can be angry at multiple things
@codinghorror @xgranade your persistent sea lioning, for example
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@codinghorror @xgranade your persistent sea lioning, for example
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@xgranade people should absolutely be taught all the pros and cons, but I really dislike absolutism and zealotry.. it's not useful, it's not practical, it accomplishes nothing (except in the very narrow cases of civil rights or human dignity). If I wanted more ones and zeroes, I'd own more computers..
@codinghorror @xgranade All of the "zealotry", including sea lioning
, is from the people who want to force us to give their precious slop machines a fair chance.Wanting to be left alone by that shit, not to have people submitting PRs and bug reports with fraudulent provenance to our projects, wanting not to have our time wasted reading slop nobody actually wrote, wanting not to have our servers hammered by gigabits per second of scraper hits, etc. isn't called "zealotry". It's called boundaries. Something tech bro culture refuses to understand.
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@codinghorror @xgranade All of the "zealotry", including sea lioning
, is from the people who want to force us to give their precious slop machines a fair chance.Wanting to be left alone by that shit, not to have people submitting PRs and bug reports with fraudulent provenance to our projects, wanting not to have our time wasted reading slop nobody actually wrote, wanting not to have our servers hammered by gigabits per second of scraper hits, etc. isn't called "zealotry". It's called boundaries. Something tech bro culture refuses to understand.
@codinghorror @xgranade Among the folks who came out of that culture, you're one of the few I largely respect and consider decent. But you really need to realize sometime that the whole culture was rotten to the core in matters of consent and boundaries. And overall folks here on the fedi are done with that shit. We're not having it.
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No, opposing LLMs isn't "purity culture." I've seen this now from quite a few different people, and I disagree vehemently. It is good, actually, to have moral principles and hold to them, even when people with more money than you find said principles annoying.
For all the folks complaining about “purity culture”:
What alternative do you propose?
Impurity culture?
We know what that looks like, now in millions of documents kind of detail…

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@xgranade people should absolutely be taught all the pros and cons, but I really dislike absolutism and zealotry.. it's not useful, it's not practical, it accomplishes nothing (except in the very narrow cases of civil rights or human dignity). If I wanted more ones and zeroes, I'd own more computers..
@codinghorror You seem to think that a strong position is necessarily one reached without reason or rationality? If I'm incorrect in understanding your position, please let me know, but it seems like you're conflating my having a strong view — one that I have repeatedly explained and justified on my feed — with a pseudoreligious "zealotry."
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@codinghorror You seem to think that a strong position is necessarily one reached without reason or rationality? If I'm incorrect in understanding your position, please let me know, but it seems like you're conflating my having a strong view — one that I have repeatedly explained and justified on my feed — with a pseudoreligious "zealotry."
@codinghorror But that conflation doesn't hold in other cases. To do the physicist-coded thing of looking at the extremes to understand the bulk (I'm not that kind of doctor, but I do have a PhD in physics, it comes up in my thinking sometimes), would you similarly say that a position like "no one should ever be a Nazi or do Nazi-like things" is one of zealotry?
The truth isn't always in the middle, and assuming that it is gives bad-faith actors immense power to unduly shift narratives.
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@codinghorror But that conflation doesn't hold in other cases. To do the physicist-coded thing of looking at the extremes to understand the bulk (I'm not that kind of doctor, but I do have a PhD in physics, it comes up in my thinking sometimes), would you similarly say that a position like "no one should ever be a Nazi or do Nazi-like things" is one of zealotry?
The truth isn't always in the middle, and assuming that it is gives bad-faith actors immense power to unduly shift narratives.
@codinghorror Regardless, though, I think you've badly missed the point of my thread. I'm not looking to convince you on LLMs, you've convinced me you have enough vested interest in the success of LLMs that I recognize that's a fruitless endeavor.
But you jumped in my replies, on a thread that didn't mention or refer to you, a thread about what goes wrong with "purity culture" rhetoric, to make the only marginally related argument that a strong opposition to LLMs is necessarily one of zealotry.
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@codinghorror Regardless, though, I think you've badly missed the point of my thread. I'm not looking to convince you on LLMs, you've convinced me you have enough vested interest in the success of LLMs that I recognize that's a fruitless endeavor.
But you jumped in my replies, on a thread that didn't mention or refer to you, a thread about what goes wrong with "purity culture" rhetoric, to make the only marginally related argument that a strong opposition to LLMs is necessarily one of zealotry.
@codinghorror To get to my original point, then, if you believe as I do that it is bad to use tools developed under eugenicist philosophies, that predominantly profit and fund fascists, that carry inordinate environmental costs, that are based on stolen labor, that act as automated scabs, and that don't work, then an opposition to those same tools is a moral position and not one of "purity culture."
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@codinghorror To get to my original point, then, if you believe as I do that it is bad to use tools developed under eugenicist philosophies, that predominantly profit and fund fascists, that carry inordinate environmental costs, that are based on stolen labor, that act as automated scabs, and that don't work, then an opposition to those same tools is a moral position and not one of "purity culture."
@codinghorror I've made my arguments for each of those many times, it's beside the point here. But critically, none of the above requires me to be correct in my beliefs — only that I have reached those rationally if perhaps based on incomplete or flawed data. In which case, make that argument (not to me, as noted above)! But it's intellectually dishonest to say that that opposition is "purity culture."