DrMux

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Colorado is going to survive climate change much better than Alabama will.

Well, in some ways. Colorado is already subject to serious drought and water shortage issues; dramatically increased number of/size of/damage from wildfires; temps in excess of 105°f just like, it seems, everywhere else (though CO Springs is higher and cooler than the worst-affected areas of the state, temperature-wise); etc.

Currently in CO Springs it is only 2 degrees (F) cooler than in Huntsville, AL. Humidity is only ~10 pts difference - otherwise yeah I'd say it's more uncomfortable in AL. Though this is only a snapshot.

I digress.

Point is climate change is affecting (present tense, not future) different areas differently.

You're absolutely right about the social aspect tho.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Sounds like a half-self-aware version of "Great Man" thinking, just with the caveat that there aren't actually any among humanity.

But actually, I think you're right. It's easier and more palatable to our narrative-hungry minds to believe that we'll get some sort of cinematic climax before the credits roll, history ends, and we walk out of the theater, than to realize that the world can both be unimaginably shitty and also incredibly boring. If the world doesn't end, or if this isn't the end of history (I think a deus ex machina utopia granted by the aliens falls in this category) we might have to confront the grim reality of slow, complicated, and mostly nameless problems. And that's a lot like waking up one day and realizing your parents are real people who don't know everything, and one day they won't be around to deal with things for you.

I've had similar thoughts about other conspiracy-type thinking like the illuminati but yeah, makes sense that it would apply to aliens as well.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

"Hmm... we really only wanted to rule over you to harvest your species' brain power through an interface with our computational networks. This... just won't do. Later losers!"

[–] [email protected] 11 points 1 year ago (5 children)

We’re tired, and we’re scared, I think.

Worse, we're used to being tired and scared. We're apathetic to our own anxieties and exhaustion. The only thing to fear is not fear itself. It's complacency toward fear.

[–] [email protected] 27 points 1 year ago (3 children)

My guess is that it's more a result of overfitting for alignment. Fine-tuning for "safety" (rather, more corporate-friendly outputs).

That is, by focusing on that specific outcome in training the model, they've compromised its ability to give well-"reasoned" "intelligent" sounding answers. A tradeoff between aspects of the model.

It's something that can happen even in simple statistical models. Say you have a scatter plot of data that loosely follows some trend, and you come up with two equations to describe that trend. One is a simple equation that loosely follows it but makes a good general approximation, and the other is a more complicated equation that very tightly fits the existing data. Then you use those two models to predict future data. But you find that the complicated equation is making predictions way off the mark that no longer fit the trend, and the simple one still has a wide error (how far its prediction is from the actual data) but still more or less accurately fits the general trend. In the more complicated equation, you've traded predictive power for explanatory power. It describes the data you originally had but it's not useful for forecasting data that follows.

That's an example of overfitting. It can happen in super-advanced statistical models like GPT, too. Training the "equation" (or as it's been called, spicy autocorrect) to predict outcomes that favor "safety" but losing the model's power to predict accurate "well-reasoned" outcomes.

If that makes any sense.

I'm not a ML researcher or statistician (I just went through a phase in college), so if this is inaccurate I'm open to corrections.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

I think you're right; it will probably never have particularly wide reach, but it will (and to some extent does have) deep appeal.

What I mean is that people who are attracted to a platform like Lemmy are the kind of people who are likelier to have those niche passions and knowledge on those topics. And they are the kind of people who are also likelier to participate in communities around those things. No, not everyone, and yes there are still communities with a broader appeal and less depth, but I think my point is clear enough. It's just kind of intrinsic to how the platform works and how it is positioned in the broader internet space.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 1 year ago

Seven passengers boarded. The rest are still trying to decipher their boarding pass.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 1 year ago

I dunno, HR might have a problem either way, but "Are you fucking me" might lead to a very awkward meeting. Depending on who you said it to.

[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago

"This paper I didn't read challenges conventional thinking, so I, as a career contrarian, am obligated to accept it as gospel from on high without further consideration."

[–] [email protected] 5 points 1 year ago (4 children)

There's a huge difference between "lol le dum fat burger chez merica" and commentary about the history of the country and the patterns, systems, and dark truths that made it what it is today. Is there any one element in this meme that you'd argue is false?

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Neither is very useful until you can correlate it with something else. Like, it takes a lot more effort to find someone in meatspace than in a database. Though, the number of databases with your face in them is a number that goes up faster every year.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Ceci n'est pas une meme.

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