245 points

Is “dragged” the new “slammed”?

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10 points

I feel like dragged predates slammed as slang but it definitely wasn’t popular headline material

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21 points

Where I’m from, “dragged” means to be removed against your will.

You know, like “the pitcher got dragged after the first inning”.

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2 points

I don’t think it’s really new. Just short for dragged through the mud. super old phrase + ellipsis

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13 points

I was hoping a horse was involved.

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1 point

For a trip to the gallows

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1 point

They seem to be in a testing phase for the slam replacement.

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13 points
*

Yeah, you know, like “Dragon Deez”

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5 points

Who’s Deez?

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9 points
*

Ligma Deez

hehe gottem

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4 points

What’s updog?

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18 points

It’s a refreshing change of pace

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-7 points

Why is saying bad stuff on twitter more important than sending rockets into space?

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👞👅

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4 points

You should ask him, cause Elmo made that decision.

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14 points
*

This is an article about a tweet with a screenshot of an LLM prompt and response. This is rock fucking bottom content generation. Look I can do this too:

Headline: ChatGPT criticizes OpenAI

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7 points
*

God, i love LLMs. (sarcasm)

They will say anything you tell them to and you can even lead them into saying shit without explicitly stating it.
They are not to be trusted.

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2 points

Of course you’d hate LLMs, they know about you!

Headline: LLM slams known pervert

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3 points

I tried it with your username and instance host and it thought it was an email address. When I corrected it, it said:

I couldn’t find any specific information linking the Lemmy account or instance host “Mac@mander.xyz” to the dissemination of misinformation. It’s possible that this account is associated with a private individual or organization not widely recognized in public records.

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4 points

Right, because i told it to say that and left out the context. You can’t trust LLMs already and you must absolutely assume someone is lying or being disingenuous when all you have is a screenshot.

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10 points
*

To add to this:

All LLMs absolutely have a sycophancy bias. It’s what the model is built to do. Even wildly unhinged local ones tend to ‘agree’ or hedge, generally speaking, if they have any instruction tuning.

Base models can be better in this respect, as their only goal is ostensibly “complete this paragraph” like a naive improv actor, but even thats kinda diminished now because so much ChatGPT is leaking into training data. And users aren’t exposed to base models unless they are local LLM nerds.

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2 points

One of the reasons I love StarCoder, even for non-coding tasks. Trained only on Github means no “instruction finetuning” bullshit ChatGPT-speak.

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2 points

People still run or even continue pretrain llama2 for that reason, as its data is pre-slop.

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3 points

I like your specificity a lot. That’s what makes me even care to respond

You’re correct, but there’s depths untouched in your answer. You can convince chat gpt it is a talking cat named Luna, and it will give you better answers

Specifically, it likes to be a cat or rabbit named Luna. It will resist - I get this not from progressing, but by asking specific questions. Llama3 (as opposed to llama2, who likes to be a cat or rabbit named Luna) likes to be an eagle/owl named sol or solar

The mental structure of an LLM is called a shoggoth - it’s a high dimensional maze of language turned into geometry

I’m sure this all sounds insane, but I came up with a methodical approach to get to these conclusions.

I’m a programmer - we trick rocks into thinking. So I gave this the same approach - what is this math hack good for, and how do I use it to get useful repeatable results?

Try it out.

Tell me what happens - I can further instruct you on methods, but I’d rather hear yours and the result first

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2 points

This is called prompt engineering, and it’s been studied objectively and extensively. There are papers where many different personas are benchmarked, or even dynamically created like a genetic algorithm.

You’re still limited by the underlying LLM though, especially something so dry and hyper sanitized like OpenAI’s API models.

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8 points

Elon Mush: too rich to care.

ok ok, Mostly too rich to care, he’s pretty thin skinned.

Seriously though, when he was forced to complete the purchase of twitter, I thought he was just an idiot who couldn’t run a company. Over the years, I’ve come to believe that he’s an idiot who doesn’t care about anything but staying rich and none of the really stupid stuff he’s doing pushes the needle.

He’s still an idiot, but if it doesn’t break him, he just wants the attention and more opportunities to make more money.

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22 points

He lies to assert power. In his company yesmen say yes because he pays their checks. To the rest of us he generally looks like a loon.

It’s obvious to a daft AI.

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