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She won an exemption from using AI at her tech job. The Pope's remarks could fuel similar appeals.
(www.businessinsider.com)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
That's fair. I actually don't think we disagree that much - I just think I have trouble conveying what I am trying to say. Whenever someone talks about 'shallow statistical predictions', I think about older techniques like Statistical Machine Translation which even had trouble with things like word order, LLMs handle text on a higher level of abstraction (which I described as a form of textual understanding) - and hence handle things like word order better - but are still inherently statistical predictors. The model stores info about how words interact and relate to one another, but it does not 'understand' what the words actually (physically?) represent beyond these interactions nor does it 'understand' what it is doing. Albeit, those interactions are modeled well enough to give a convincing replica of doing so.
That makes more sense, thanks for expanding on your point.
Like I said, I mainly take issue with describing it as 'understanding' due to the connotations it gives off. I'm used to AI glazers using the same wordings and actually try to make the argument there is an understanding behind the statistical probabilities.