• Ibex0@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    No, because “not” was ignored.

    I dunno, “not” is pretty big in a yes/no question.

    • xantoxis@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      It’s not about whether the word is important (as you understand language), but whether the word frequently appears near all those other words.

      Nobody is out there asking the Internet whether their non-allergy is dangerous. But the question next door to that one has hundreds of answers, so that’s what this thing is paying attention to. If the question is asked a thousand times with the same answer, the addition of one more word can’t be that important, right?

      This behavior reveals a much more damning problem with how LLMs work. We already knew they didn’t understand context, such as the context you and I have that peanut allergies are common and dangerous. That context informs us that most questions about the subject will be about the dangers of having a peanut allergy. Machine models like this can’t analyze a sentence on the basis of abstract knowledge, because they don’t understand anything. That’s what understanding means. We knew that was a weakness already.

      But what this reveals is that the LLM can’t even parse language successfully. Even with just the context of the language itself, and lacking the context of what the sentence means, it should know that “not” matters in this sentence. But it answers as if it doesn’t know that.

      • ThatWeirdGuy1001@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        This is why I’ve argued that we shouldn’t be calling these things “AI”

        True artificial intelligence wouldn’t have these problems as it’d be able to learn very quickly all the nuance in language and comprehension.

        This is virtual intelligence (VI) which is designed to seem like it’s intelligent by using certain parameters with set information that is used to calculate a predetermined response.

        Like autocorrect trying to figure out what word you’re going to use next or an interactive machine that has a set amount of possible actions.

        It’s not truly intelligent it’s simply made to seem intelligent and that’s not the same thing.

        • HelloHotel@lemm.ee
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          11 months ago
          rambling

          We currently only have the tech to make virtual intelligence, what you are calling AI is likely what the rest of the world will call General AI (GAI) (an even more inflated name and concept)

          I dont beleve we are too far off from GAI. GAI is to AI what Rust is to C. Rust is magical compared to C but C will likely not be forgotten completely due to rust Rust

      • HelloHotel@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        Try writing a tool to automate gathering a video’s context clues, worlds most computationally expensive random boolean generator.