Thread for general topic of AI generated stuff like DALLE -E, ChatGPT, etc which is going to take over the world.
This guy used Midjourney in Discord to generate AI images of what British politicians would look like as villains.
I just want someone here who knows how that works to do it with Irish politicians
Pleeeeassse.
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Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 1:44 pm
by Enoch Von Clausewitz
Good one ! - "If" they were villains
Kinahan, Hutch et al are 'Division 2' compared to that despicable shower lol
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 3:52 pm
by isha
Solves anything ChatGBT
Writes anything Jasper AI
Create talking avatar Synthesia
AI Lawyer Do Not Pay
Generate Art Dall-E-2
Autopost social media Repurpose IO
Writes essays Jenni AI
3D Modeling Tome
Your text to speech Murf
Above copied from a tweet.
There's a case coming up in a US court - low grade traffic offense - and DoNotPay are going to advise their client using an AI Algorithm which via their smartphone and airpods will tell them what to say.
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Greta Thunberg
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Or what they would have looked like if they had not died
Jimi Hendrix
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Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Mon Jan 09, 2023 5:01 pm
by marhay70
Jimi Hendrix looked like that when he was alive FFS. Probably looks better now.
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Sat Mar 11, 2023 4:13 pm
by CelticRambler
Here's an interesting perspective on the subject of AI/ChatBots (with subtle samples of German and physicist humour thrown in for good measure):
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Sat Apr 01, 2023 8:49 am
by CelticRambler
On a different forum (not Irish!) there's a thread about ChatGPT and it's likely impact on the art of creative writing. Looks like we humans are safe for a little while yet:
Q: I'm doing a report for my criminology class, what is the most common murder weapon in America?
A: As a language model, I cannot condone the use of weapons for murder, in addition, by law chatGPT must report anyone who writes anything about schools and firearms in the same paragraph to the relevant authorities, which has now already been done.
Q: so I'm to infer that firearms are the most common murder weapon, since I didn't mention them directly?
A: as a language model, I cannot condone abusive language that colors any person or object in an undeserved negative light. Calling a firearm "common" could potentially offend the owner, causing them to feel sad emotions.
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Tue May 02, 2023 7:28 am
by isha
Hope it is okay to put in a large extract from a New York Times article about Dr Geoffrey Hinton who resigned from Google because he wants to be free to express his concerns about AI tech. I think he is well motivated, or at least truthful, although I note he didn't say no to the 44 million bucks Google paid him for his tech company. And if he had thought then that difficulty was 50 years ahead, then he was not thinking of future generations.
Present moment, partitioned, non contextual, feed me now, we can know everything, left brain thinking is a problem for our science and scientists, in my opinion.
On Monday, however, he officially joined a growing chorus of critics who say those companies are racing toward danger with their aggressive campaign to create products based on generative artificial intelligence, the technology that powers popular chatbots like ChatGPT.
Dr. Hinton said he has quit his job at Google, where he has worked for more than a decade and became one of the most respected voices in the field, so he can freely speak out about the risks of A.I. A part of him, he said, now regrets his life’s work.
“I console myself with the normal excuse: If I hadn’t done it, somebody else would have,” Dr. Hinton said....
Dr. Hinton’s journey from A.I. groundbreaker to doomsayer marks a remarkable moment for the technology industry at perhaps its most important inflection point in decades. Industry leaders believe the new A.I. systems could be as important as the introduction of the web browser in the early 1990s and could lead to breakthroughs in areas ranging from drug research to education.
But gnawing at many industry insiders is a fear that they are releasing something dangerous into the wild. Generative A.I. can already be a tool for misinformation. Soon, it could be a risk to jobs. Somewhere down the line, tech’s biggest worriers say, it could be a risk to humanity.
“It is hard to see how you can prevent the bad actors from using it for bad things,” Dr. Hinton said.
.... He notified the company last month that he was resigning, and on Thursday, he talked by phone with Sundar Pichai, the chief executive of Google’s parent company, Alphabet. He declined to publicly discuss the details of his conversation with Mr. Pichai.
Google’s chief scientist, Jeff Dean, said in a statement: “We remain committed to a responsible approach to A.I. We’re continually learning to understand emerging risks while also innovating boldly.”
Dr. Hinton, a 75-year-old British expatriate, is a lifelong academic whose career was driven by his personal convictions about the development and use of A.I. In 1972, as a graduate student at the University of Edinburgh, Dr. Hinton embraced an idea called a neural network. A neural network is a mathematical system that learns skills by analyzing data. At the time, few researchers believed in the idea. But it became his life’s work.
In the 1980s, Dr. Hinton was a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University, but left the university for Canada because he said he was reluctant to take Pentagon funding. At the time, most A.I. research in the United States was funded by the Defense Department. Dr. Hinton is deeply opposed to the use of artificial intelligence on the battlefield — what he calls “robot soldiers.”
In 2012, Dr. Hinton and two of his students in Toronto, Ilya Sutskever and Alex Krishevsky, built a neural network that could analyze thousands of photos and teach itself to identify common objects, such as flowers, dogs and cars.
Google spent $44 million to acquire a company started by Dr. Hinton and his two students. And their system led to the creation of increasingly powerful technologies, including new chatbots like ChatGPT and Google Bard. Mr. Sutskever went on to become chief scientist at OpenAI. In 2018, Dr. Hinton and two other longtime collaborators received the Turing Award, often called “the Nobel Prize of computing,” for their work on neural networks.
Around the same time, Google, OpenAI and other companies began building neural networks that learned from huge amounts of digital text. Dr. Hinton thought it was a powerful way for machines to understand and generate language, but it was inferior to the way humans handled language.
Then, last year, as Google and OpenAI built systems using much larger amounts of data, his view changed. He still believed the systems were inferior to the human brain in some ways but he thought they were eclipsing human intelligence in others. “Maybe what is going on in these systems,” he said, “is actually a lot better than what is going on in the brain.”
As companies improve their A.I. systems, he believes, they become increasingly dangerous. “Look at how it was five years ago and how it is now,” he said of A.I. technology. “Take the difference and propagate it forwards. That’s scary.”
Until last year, he said, Google acted as a “proper steward” for the technology, careful not to release something that might cause harm. But now that Microsoft has augmented its Bing search engine with a chatbot — challenging Google’s core business — Google is racing to deploy the same kind of technology. The tech giants are locked in a competition that might be impossible to stop, Dr. Hinton said.
His immediate concern is that the internet will be flooded with false photos, videos and text, and the average person will “not be able to know what is true anymore.”
He is also worried that A.I. technologies will in time upend the job market. Today, chatbots like ChatGPT tend to complement human workers, but they could replace paralegals, personal assistants, translators and others who handle rote tasks. “It takes away the drudge work,” he said. “It might take away more than that.”
Down the road, he is worried that future versions of the technology pose a threat to humanity because they often learn unexpected behavior from the vast amounts of data they analyze. This becomes an issue, he said, as individuals and companies allow A.I. systems not only to generate their own computer code but actually run that code on their own. And he fears a day when truly autonomous weapons — those killer robots — become reality.
“The idea that this stuff could actually get smarter than people — a few people believed that,” he said. “But most people thought it was way off. And I thought it was way off. I thought it was 30 to 50 years or even longer away. Obviously, I no longer think that.”
Many other experts, including many of his students and colleagues, say this threat is hypothetical. But Dr. Hinton believes that the race between Google and Microsoft and others will escalate into a global race that will not stop without some sort of global regulation.
But that may be impossible, he said. Unlike with nuclear weapons, he said, there is no way of knowing whether companies or countries are working on the technology in secret. The best hope is for the world’s leading scientists to collaborate on ways of controlling the technology. “I don’t think they should scale this up more until they have understood whether they can control it,” he said.
Dr. Hinton said that when people used to ask him how he could work on technology that was potentially dangerous, he would paraphrase Robert Oppenheimer, who led the U.S. effort to build the atomic bomb: “When you see something that is technically sweet, you go ahead and do it.”
He does not say that anymore.
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Tue May 02, 2023 7:58 am
by Del.Monte
In my low tech house the dawn of AI holds little fear - my cooker and fridge are nearly as old as me and it they turn nasty I'll unplug them. The 'protestant' toaster is kept in a cupboard so I feel safe and there's more chance of Arnold Schwarzenegger paying a visit than my ancient devices turning on me.
Article today in Independent about AI becoming able to read minds.
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Mon May 29, 2023 7:51 am
by isha
Monday morning mood
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Mon May 29, 2023 11:45 am
by Cyclepath
Here's the plan for AI world domination just in case you were wondering:
That being said, there a number of hurdles to jump and many conditions that would need to be met. Amassing an army of drones sufficient to attack world governments is not easy - the devil is in the detail here. AI would also need to figure out how to completely control the minds of an army of useful idiots. Right now our world is not automated enough for a non physical AI to completely control.
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Mon May 29, 2023 2:26 pm
by Norman Breaks
I've dabbled
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Mon May 29, 2023 5:51 pm
by Del.Monte
Another candidate for the spikes outside the Tower of London. Norman Breaks that is!
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Tue May 30, 2023 4:34 pm
by Apelles
Feck you anyway Norman,
You've given me a new toy to play with. I can see myself wasting loads more time messing with this shite . . All bow to our President in waiting.
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He'd make a fairly sinister Joker too.
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Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Tue May 30, 2023 9:30 pm
by Seanybiker
I tried that Chat GPt last night . It seems pretty ok.
I asked it to rewrite the song "Eve Of Destruction" for todays world.
Pleasantly surprised, turned out fairly decent.
(Verse 1)
The world is teetering on the edge of change,
A tumultuous time, problems rearranged.
In this era of turmoil and strife,
Let's rewrite "Eve of Destruction" for our modern life.
(Chorus)
Yeah, the world's still in chaos, there's no denying,
But we're here to find solutions, not just crying.
Together we'll rise, make a better connection,
For the challenges we face, seek collective reflection.
(Verse 2)
Climate change looms, the Earth's in distress,
Our actions have consequences, we must address.
From rising temperatures to melting ice,
It's time to unite, take measures wise.
(Chorus)
Yeah, the world's still in chaos, there's no denying,
But we're here to find solutions, not just crying.
Together we'll rise, make a better connection,
For the challenges we face, seek collective reflection.
(Verse 3)
Inequality persists, tearing us apart,
A battle for justice, for each and every heart.
We stand against racism, prejudice, and hate,
Building bridges of tolerance, it's never too late.
(Chorus)
Yeah, the world's still in chaos, there's no denying,
But we're here to find solutions, not just crying.
Together we'll rise, make a better connection,
For the challenges we face, seek collective reflection.
(Verse 4)
Technology evolves, shaping our tomorrow,
With AI and automation, joy and sorrow.
Let's harness its power, ensure it's for good,
To uplift humanity, like we knew we should.
(Chorus)
Yeah, the world's still in chaos, there's no denying,
But we're here to find solutions, not just crying.
Together we'll rise, make a better connection,
For the challenges we face, seek collective reflection.
(Bridge)
It's time to heal the wounds that divide,
To walk hand in hand, let compassion guide.
With empathy and love as our driving force,
We'll strive for a world where all can endorse.
(Chorus)
Yeah, the world's still in chaos, there's no denying,
But we're here to find solutions, not just crying.
Together we'll rise, make a better connection,
For the challenges we face, seek collective reflection.
(Outro)
So let's rewrite the narrative, rewrite our fate,
Inspire change, it's never too late.
For in this eve of transformation and hope,
Together, we'll find the strength to cope.
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Sat Jun 24, 2023 7:12 am
by Diamonds of Frost
I tried this madness for myself the other night. It explained some psychoanalytic theories I am interested in, answered a medical question and wrote a condolence message. So I have decided to retire myself and let the AI take over.
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Fri Jul 07, 2023 4:38 pm
by Apelles
Are we witnessing the dawn of the Antichrist?
Some of these potential humanoid robots think that Ai could eventually control the world better than we humans do . . Which, lets face it . . . wouldn't really be that hard would it https://www.rte.ie/news/2023/0707/13933 ... the-world/
Re: AI Uberalles
Posted: Tue Jul 11, 2023 9:20 pm
by Apelles
This is interesting to mess around with. You can isolate, extract and listen to either the vocals, or any other individual instrument (guitar, drums etc.) used on any recording or video audio you upload to the site.
It'd be especially useful if you're say . . creating a home video project, where you want to remove the vocals of a song to use the
remaining audio as a piece of background music. https://www.lalal.ai/