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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 17th, 2023

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  • I’m going to use those things as answer machines and you can’t stop me.

    Jokes aside, I always validate what chatbots tell me, not even just important things. I use GPT-4 for work and 90% of the time it can show me how to use very specific functions in complex ways, but yesterday (for the first time in awhile) it made up a function that didn’t exist. To its credit, I said, “Are you sure about [function]?” and it said, “I’m sorry, I got confused. That function doesn’t exist. However, look into X, Y, Z for further resources” and I did and they were the correct things to look into.


  • The best ones can literally write pretty good code, and explain any concept on the Internet to you that you ask them to. If you don’t understand a specific thing about their explanation, they can add onto their explanation, and they can respond in the style you want (explain as if I’m ten, explain as if I’m an undergrad, etc).

    I use it literally every day for work in a somewhat niche field. I don’t really agree that it’s a “parlor trick”.






  • I think the fundamental question is, as the Fediverse gets more popular, then how will servers get paid for? Here are some possibilities I see for how Fediverse hosting could work at scale:

    • Surviving off donations alone: Possible but in my estimation unlikely, and it could veer into the territory of big donors having a controlling stake or exerting their interests.
    • Instances limiting number of users to what they can afford: This would require the network of instances process to really work well.
    • Big instances selling advertisements: Without oversight or moral commitment, this could easily go towards creepy personal data collection.
    • Crowdsourcing the costs: This would require transparency and fundraising or some other model
    • Hosts financing the operation in other ways: This could also easily get into creepy data collection practices or other dark patterns.

    I hope we come up with some process or plan for avoiding the pitfalls and forging an honest and community-integrating way forward.








  • IQ is mostly a pretty arbitrary and pointless metric because things like attitude, process, and creativity matter a lot more for getting results, but it can still help to diagnose learning disabilities and it has a solid statistical underpinning. The only thing it strongly correlates with is chess ability.