• kromem@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    This image was faked. Check the post update.

    Turns out that even for humans knowing what’s true or not on the Internet isn’t so simple.

    • meseek #2982@lemmy.ca
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      7 months ago

      Yes we know. We aren’t talking about the authenticity of the meme. We are talking about the fundamental problem with “AI”

      • kromem@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        You’re kind of missing the point. The problem doesn’t seem to be fundamental to just AI.

        Much like how humans were so sure that theory of mind variations with transparent boxes ending up wrong was an ‘AI’ problem until researchers finally gave those problems to humans and half got them wrong too.

        We saw something similar with vision models years ago when the models finally got representative enough they were able to successfully model and predict unknown optical illusions in humans too.

        One of the issues with AI is the regression to the mean from the training data and the limited effectiveness of fine tuning to bias it, so whenever you see a behavior in AI that’s also present in the training set, it becomes more amorphous just how much of the problem is inherent to the architecture of the network and how much is poor isolation from the samples exhibiting those issues in the training data.

        There’s an entire sub dedicated to “ate the onion” for example. For a model trained on social media data, it’s going to include plenty of examples of people treating the onion as an authoritative source and reacting to it. So when Gemini cites the Onion in a search summary, is it the network architecture doing something uniquely ‘AI’ or is it the model extending behaviors present in the training data?

        While there are mechanical reasons confabulations occur, there are also data reasons which arise from human deficiencies as well.