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  3. My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing.

My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing.

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  • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

    My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

    LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

    In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

    But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

    If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

    netraven@hear-me.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
    netraven@hear-me.socialN This user is from outside of this forum
    netraven@hear-me.social
    wrote last edited by
    #9

    @EmilyEnough there's no saving people, you know.

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

      My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

      LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

      In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

      But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

      If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

      hosford42@techhub.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
      hosford42@techhub.socialH This user is from outside of this forum
      hosford42@techhub.social
      wrote last edited by
      #10

      @EmilyEnough "squishy" computing

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

        My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

        LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

        In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

        But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

        If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

        longplay_games@mastodon.gamedev.placeL This user is from outside of this forum
        longplay_games@mastodon.gamedev.placeL This user is from outside of this forum
        longplay_games@mastodon.gamedev.place
        wrote last edited by
        #11

        @EmilyEnough The one and only reason I ever got into computers back in the late 70s/early 80s was exactly this.

        It was so refreshing to work with something that had a super specific and repeatable instruction set, where the *vast* majority of issues could be nailed down quite precisely to something I could control.

        If I didn't like this sort of work, I wouldn't do it.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

          My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

          LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

          In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

          But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

          If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

          haui@mastodon.giftedmc.comH This user is from outside of this forum
          haui@mastodon.giftedmc.comH This user is from outside of this forum
          haui@mastodon.giftedmc.com
          wrote last edited by
          #12

          @EmilyEnough
          The most interesting detail for my autistic brain is that the professional computertouchers like myself are technically proletatians but are paid like the managerial class (also called worker aristocracy).

          So what we - imho - are witnessing is the proletarization of the computer workers. Like other jobs that used to be well paid before they got eliminated/recuperated.

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          • ? Guest

            @EmilyEnough Wow, I have thought a lot about how coding LLMs are antithetical to my own OCD tendencies that want everything to be built and formatted in a very specific way (i.e. the right way), but had not considered how terrible the interface would be for folks who prefer not to have to process information conversationally.

            I would love to read an entire book or series of articles about how LLMs as an interface enforce neurotypical modes of communication on neurodiverse people.

            annehargreaves@ioc.exchangeA This user is from outside of this forum
            annehargreaves@ioc.exchangeA This user is from outside of this forum
            annehargreaves@ioc.exchange
            wrote last edited by
            #13

            @mikemccaffrey @EmilyEnough Good point.

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            • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

              My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

              LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

              In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

              But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

              If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

              jzakotnik@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
              jzakotnik@mastodon.socialJ This user is from outside of this forum
              jzakotnik@mastodon.social
              wrote last edited by
              #14

              @EmilyEnough very interesting observation, thanks a lot. I haven’t perceived it that way - I used to work a lot with probabilistic models, simulated annealing and genetic algorithms and in that case the computer works entirely deterministic but the result is always different. So I lost my expectation to a deterministic result long time ago 😉

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              • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

                My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

                LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

                In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

                But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

                If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

                cybervegan@autistics.lifeC This user is from outside of this forum
                cybervegan@autistics.lifeC This user is from outside of this forum
                cybervegan@autistics.life
                wrote last edited by
                #15

                @EmilyEnough Very astute and exactly my experience too - I went into computing for the same kinds of reasons and as you say LLMs break that. Thank you for expressing it so clearly.

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                • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

                  My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

                  LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

                  In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

                  But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

                  If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

                  evildrganymede@wargamers.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                  evildrganymede@wargamers.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                  evildrganymede@wargamers.social
                  wrote last edited by
                  #16

                  @EmilyEnough I think you're absolutely correct on this. Yet another reason why we need to find a way to irrevocably destroy this abomination.

                  But also it's not just the style of "communication" that these algorithms are pretending to do, it's that you cannot trust that their output is even correct because they have no understanding of what they are "saying". They could be "hallucinating" complete nonsense but they'll output it in an authoritative way and may even make up references that don't exist. They're 100% bullshit generators (it's even been scientifically proven).

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                  • uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                    uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                    uriel@x.keinpfusch.net
                    wrote last edited by
                    #17

                    @EmilyEnough

                    My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine

                    Also known as “training”. When people are trained in art, they don’t reinvent art from scratch. This is why you can’t really sue an LLM for plagiarism: you can’t even identify specific victims in the first place.

                    and disaster for the environment,

                    Nope. The whole IT sector uses about 3–5% of global electricity, so poor home insulation is a much bigger problem overall.

                    is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing.

                    We call it a statistical method, or more precisely a stochastic system. Because, to a large extent, human behaviour itself can be modelled as a stochastic process.

                    If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering.

                    The problems you face when communicating with LLMs are the same ones you face when communicating with people, because statistically speaking an LLM mimics how people communicate.

                    This is why computer‑mediated communication was used before, and is still used, when computers were not trying to mimic humans.

                    The core issue is that mimicking humans reproduces the same communication problems people already have with one another; and the “unpredictability” of the other party is nothing new in human interaction.

                    LLMs mimic humans, so the problems you encounter with LLMs are the same problems you encounter with humans. The point is that you consider it normal when you face exactly the same issues with other people.

                    magitweeter@mastodon.socialM pglpm@c.imP greenskyoverme@ohai.socialG 3 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

                      My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

                      LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

                      In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

                      But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

                      If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

                      monkee@chaos.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                      monkee@chaos.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                      monkee@chaos.social
                      wrote last edited by
                      #18

                      @EmilyEnough

                      "They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem."

                      OMG - That's perfect. Maybe also explains why everyone loves them that much. 🤨

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU uriel@x.keinpfusch.net

                        @EmilyEnough

                        My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine

                        Also known as “training”. When people are trained in art, they don’t reinvent art from scratch. This is why you can’t really sue an LLM for plagiarism: you can’t even identify specific victims in the first place.

                        and disaster for the environment,

                        Nope. The whole IT sector uses about 3–5% of global electricity, so poor home insulation is a much bigger problem overall.

                        is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing.

                        We call it a statistical method, or more precisely a stochastic system. Because, to a large extent, human behaviour itself can be modelled as a stochastic process.

                        If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering.

                        The problems you face when communicating with LLMs are the same ones you face when communicating with people, because statistically speaking an LLM mimics how people communicate.

                        This is why computer‑mediated communication was used before, and is still used, when computers were not trying to mimic humans.

                        The core issue is that mimicking humans reproduces the same communication problems people already have with one another; and the “unpredictability” of the other party is nothing new in human interaction.

                        LLMs mimic humans, so the problems you encounter with LLMs are the same problems you encounter with humans. The point is that you consider it normal when you face exactly the same issues with other people.

                        magitweeter@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                        magitweeter@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
                        magitweeter@mastodon.social
                        wrote last edited by
                        #19

                        @uriel Way to miss the point

                        @EmilyEnough

                        uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • magitweeter@mastodon.socialM magitweeter@mastodon.social

                          @uriel Way to miss the point

                          @EmilyEnough

                          uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                          uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                          uriel@x.keinpfusch.net
                          wrote last edited by
                          #20

                          @magitweeter @EmilyEnough

                          Way to miss the point

                          whatever.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU uriel@x.keinpfusch.net

                            @EmilyEnough

                            My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine

                            Also known as “training”. When people are trained in art, they don’t reinvent art from scratch. This is why you can’t really sue an LLM for plagiarism: you can’t even identify specific victims in the first place.

                            and disaster for the environment,

                            Nope. The whole IT sector uses about 3–5% of global electricity, so poor home insulation is a much bigger problem overall.

                            is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing.

                            We call it a statistical method, or more precisely a stochastic system. Because, to a large extent, human behaviour itself can be modelled as a stochastic process.

                            If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering.

                            The problems you face when communicating with LLMs are the same ones you face when communicating with people, because statistically speaking an LLM mimics how people communicate.

                            This is why computer‑mediated communication was used before, and is still used, when computers were not trying to mimic humans.

                            The core issue is that mimicking humans reproduces the same communication problems people already have with one another; and the “unpredictability” of the other party is nothing new in human interaction.

                            LLMs mimic humans, so the problems you encounter with LLMs are the same problems you encounter with humans. The point is that you consider it normal when you face exactly the same issues with other people.

                            pglpm@c.imP This user is from outside of this forum
                            pglpm@c.imP This user is from outside of this forum
                            pglpm@c.im
                            wrote last edited by
                            #21

                            @uriel @EmilyEnough

                            > Nope. The whole IT sector uses about 3–5% of global electricity, so poor home insulation is a much bigger problem overall.

                            Source?

                            > We call it a statistical method, or more precisely a stochastic system. Because, to a large extent, human behaviour itself can be modelled as a stochastic process.

                            Source? In fact this is false. Human behaviour includes more than a stochastic process, even though it may adopt stochastic heuristics to speed up some computational parts. This is also why LLMs are technically speaking *not* AI. An AI includes, as human reasoning does, an internal world model and the basic set of Boolean probability-logic rules. See for instance Russell & Norvig's *Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach* (http://aima.cs.berkeley.edu/global-index.html), or Pearl's older *Probabilistic Reasoning in Intelligent Systems* (https://doi.org/10.1016/C2009-0-27609-4). LLMs are, instead, just Markov chains (https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2410.02724). A modern robot vacuum cleaner is more "AI" than an LLM.

                            This is also the reason why the larger the software project you apply an LLM to, the more likely the failure. Such kind of application requires larger and larger string correlations, which are therefore more and more uncertain and fault-prone, and these faults are therefore also more difficult to spot. Such kind of applications may also require new or innovative kinds of solution, which again are less likely to be stumbled upon by an LLM.

                            > The problems you face when communicating with LLMs are the same ones you face when communicating with people, because statistically speaking an LLM mimics how people communicate.

                            No, because humans, and also *proper AI*, have a "logic engine" underneath. It may require some effort to bring the logic engine to the fore instead of poor heuristics, but it can be done (related: Kahneman's *Thinking, Fast and Slow*, and the research cited there). With LLM it can't be done because there's no logic engine at all there.

                            uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • pglpm@c.imP pglpm@c.im

                              @uriel @EmilyEnough

                              > Nope. The whole IT sector uses about 3–5% of global electricity, so poor home insulation is a much bigger problem overall.

                              Source?

                              > We call it a statistical method, or more precisely a stochastic system. Because, to a large extent, human behaviour itself can be modelled as a stochastic process.

                              Source? In fact this is false. Human behaviour includes more than a stochastic process, even though it may adopt stochastic heuristics to speed up some computational parts. This is also why LLMs are technically speaking *not* AI. An AI includes, as human reasoning does, an internal world model and the basic set of Boolean probability-logic rules. See for instance Russell & Norvig's *Artificial Intelligence: A Modern Approach* (http://aima.cs.berkeley.edu/global-index.html), or Pearl's older *Probabilistic Reasoning in Intelligent Systems* (https://doi.org/10.1016/C2009-0-27609-4). LLMs are, instead, just Markov chains (https://doi.org/10.48550/arXiv.2410.02724). A modern robot vacuum cleaner is more "AI" than an LLM.

                              This is also the reason why the larger the software project you apply an LLM to, the more likely the failure. Such kind of application requires larger and larger string correlations, which are therefore more and more uncertain and fault-prone, and these faults are therefore also more difficult to spot. Such kind of applications may also require new or innovative kinds of solution, which again are less likely to be stumbled upon by an LLM.

                              > The problems you face when communicating with LLMs are the same ones you face when communicating with people, because statistically speaking an LLM mimics how people communicate.

                              No, because humans, and also *proper AI*, have a "logic engine" underneath. It may require some effort to bring the logic engine to the fore instead of poor heuristics, but it can be done (related: Kahneman's *Thinking, Fast and Slow*, and the research cited there). With LLM it can't be done because there's no logic engine at all there.

                              uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                              uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                              uriel@x.keinpfusch.net
                              wrote last edited by
                              #22

                              @pglpm @EmilyEnough

                              Source?

                              Who Am I, your secretary? Just google.

                              here is my answer, complete.

                              Das Böse Büro

                              blog, personale, pensieri, riflessioni, sfoghi , uriel, fanelli, loweel

                              favicon

                              Das Böse Büro (keinpfusch.net)

                              pglpm@c.imP 1 Reply Last reply
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                              • uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU uriel@x.keinpfusch.net

                                @pglpm @EmilyEnough

                                Source?

                                Who Am I, your secretary? Just google.

                                here is my answer, complete.

                                Das Böse Büro

                                blog, personale, pensieri, riflessioni, sfoghi , uriel, fanelli, loweel

                                favicon

                                Das Böse Büro (keinpfusch.net)

                                pglpm@c.imP This user is from outside of this forum
                                pglpm@c.imP This user is from outside of this forum
                                pglpm@c.im
                                wrote last edited by
                                #23

                                @uriel @EmilyEnough
                                No, you're the one making the claim, so the onus is on you to give evidence.

                                uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • pglpm@c.imP pglpm@c.im

                                  @uriel @EmilyEnough
                                  No, you're the one making the claim, so the onus is on you to give evidence.

                                  uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                                  uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                                  uriel@x.keinpfusch.net
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #24

                                  @pglpm @EmilyEnough

                                  ok, since you aren't able to, let me google for sources:

                                  Link Preview Image
                                  We did the math on AI’s energy footprint. Here’s the story you haven’t heard.

                                  The emissions from individual AI text, image, and video queries seem small—until you add up what the industry isn’t tracking and consider where it’s heading next.

                                  favicon

                                  MIT Technology Review (www.technologyreview.com)

                                  MIT says , 4.4%.

                                  Arxiv is so full of shit, I don't even care. WARNING: next time you ask me to google something for you, since you are too stupid for , you must pay me.

                                  Link Preview Image
                                  pglpm@c.imP 1 Reply Last reply
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                                  • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

                                    My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

                                    LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

                                    In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

                                    But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

                                    If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

                                    jesterchen@social.tchncs.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                    jesterchen@social.tchncs.deJ This user is from outside of this forum
                                    jesterchen@social.tchncs.de
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #25

                                    @EmilyEnough 🏆🏆🏆

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                                    • uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU uriel@x.keinpfusch.net

                                      @EmilyEnough

                                      My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine

                                      Also known as “training”. When people are trained in art, they don’t reinvent art from scratch. This is why you can’t really sue an LLM for plagiarism: you can’t even identify specific victims in the first place.

                                      and disaster for the environment,

                                      Nope. The whole IT sector uses about 3–5% of global electricity, so poor home insulation is a much bigger problem overall.

                                      is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing.

                                      We call it a statistical method, or more precisely a stochastic system. Because, to a large extent, human behaviour itself can be modelled as a stochastic process.

                                      If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering.

                                      The problems you face when communicating with LLMs are the same ones you face when communicating with people, because statistically speaking an LLM mimics how people communicate.

                                      This is why computer‑mediated communication was used before, and is still used, when computers were not trying to mimic humans.

                                      The core issue is that mimicking humans reproduces the same communication problems people already have with one another; and the “unpredictability” of the other party is nothing new in human interaction.

                                      LLMs mimic humans, so the problems you encounter with LLMs are the same problems you encounter with humans. The point is that you consider it normal when you face exactly the same issues with other people.

                                      greenskyoverme@ohai.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
                                      greenskyoverme@ohai.socialG This user is from outside of this forum
                                      greenskyoverme@ohai.social
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #26

                                      @uriel

                                      No.

                                      @EmilyEnough

                                      uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • emilyenough@hachyderm.ioE emilyenough@hachyderm.io

                                        My biggest problem with the concept of LLMs, even if they weren’t a giant plagiarism laundering machine and disaster for the environment, is that they introduce so much unpredictability into computing. I became a professional computer toucher because they do exactly what you tell them to. Not always what you wanted, but exactly what you asked for.

                                        LLMs turn that upside down. They turn a very autistic do-what-you-say, say-what-you-mean commmunication style with the machine into a neurotypical conversation talking around the issue, but never directly addressing the substance of problem.

                                        In any conversation I have with a person, I’m modeling their understanding of the topic at hand, trying to tailor my communication style to their needs. The same applies to programming languages and frameworks. If you work with a language the way its author intended it goes a lot easier.

                                        But LLMs don’t have an understanding of the conversation. There is no intent. It’s just a mostly-likely-next-word generator on steroids. You’re trying to give directions to a lossily compressed copy of the entire works of human writing. There is no mind to model, and no predictability to the output.

                                        If I wanted to spend my time communicating in a superficial, neurotypical style my autistic ass certainly wouldn’t have gone into computering. LLMs are the final act of the finance bros and capitalists wrestling modern technology away from the technically literate proletariat who built it.

                                        lettosprey@tech.lgbtL This user is from outside of this forum
                                        lettosprey@tech.lgbtL This user is from outside of this forum
                                        lettosprey@tech.lgbt
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #27

                                        @EmilyEnough There are so many "My biggest problem with LLM, even if it wasn't for <list of other big problems>", there should be collection of them somewhere.

                                        But, yes, this bit bugs (pun intended) me and worries me. I'm more and more falling for BEAM family languages (Erlang, Elixir and Gleam) because of how they are designed to be as predictable as possible.

                                        It may not be too odd that I see a lot less AI push in that ecosystem compared to other ones.

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                                        • greenskyoverme@ohai.socialG greenskyoverme@ohai.social

                                          @uriel

                                          No.

                                          @EmilyEnough

                                          uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                                          uriel@x.keinpfusch.netU This user is from outside of this forum
                                          uriel@x.keinpfusch.net
                                          wrote last edited by
                                          #28

                                          @GreenSkyOverMe @EmilyEnough

                                          whatever.

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