@GaryMarcus Open source models are a great opportunity to sell hardware to end-users, so it creates markets for companies like Apple and Nvidia. It‘s also impossible to prevent this kind of knowledge from spreading. Only solution: staying competitive as a society.
@BullTheoryio I‘m doing AI as a full time job and I can tell that training never ends. Not saying there won‘t be any ups and downs, but the assumption that training will end is wrong.
@ProfTomYeh Not only the "unprofitable" shop runs out of cash and maybe a different one moves in, but the entire shop space gets closed down permanently. Wild animals start to nest there – since nobody needs at train time – and they might make trouble later at inference.
@livingdevops@elonmusk The downfall began with C++. It was a mistake that lead to an overengineering explosion and now we are suffering the consequences.
@iruletheworldmo The AIs I‘ve trained exhibit a weird behaviour depending on the architecture, but some can see people in videos of total noise. When you watch those videos 5 times or so, you actually spot them, too. But just camera malfunction, not ghosts or something.
@alex_prompter Actually, there has always been a shortage of judges and judges are chronically overworked. Using AI to automate certain tasks while maintaining the current legal workforce could also be used to make justice more accessible and improve work conditions.